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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1949)
HUWi . t-The Sfateeaaqn.' Salem Orecjoat, 4 U.S. Military Leaders in Berlin .Brand Russ Friendliness 'Mask' Br Theenas A. Reedy; I BERLIN, Aug. 2l-iJP)-A special report by the VS. military gov ernment for Berlin said today the Russians' current air of friendliness here is a pose to mask the. real goal of the Kremlin communist dom ination of all Germany. i ' f The report was submitted to Maj. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor,! who will succeed Brig. Geo. Frank Howley as commandant ox ine American I sector of Berlin next month, and to VS. Military Governor John f m w m ' : u. marine u)rps Reservists at California Post (Picture on page one) CAMP PEXDLETON. Calif Aug. 21 -(Special)- Forty -four marine corps reservists from Sa lem C battery. 4th 105mm howit . rer battalion, landed at 1:35 pm. (PST) today on the Camp Pendle ton airstrip after a five-hour flight from Salem in two marine trans tort Dlanes. The Salem unit will train the next two weeks at the sprawling southern California station, fol lowing a tight schedule that In cludes a maximum of up-to-the- minute combat- type training. Artillerymen will devote most days and several nights to firing ami deployment of howitzers, pri mary marine infantry support weapon. They also will work at the rifle ranee, practicing and oualifying with small arms. Other Oregon batteries to begin training today are from Portland, headquarters of the 4th battalion. and Eugene. Reservists are ex nected to arrive home by train September 4. Reuther States Ford Adamant Over Pensions DETROIT, Aug. 21 -P- Walter Reuther told 3,000 old-time rord employe today the corripany has not budged a bit in its opposition to a pension plan for it 108,000 workers this year. And the CIO United Auto Wok ern, said the union president, will not sign a contract with Ford with out a pension plan. It will strike Instead. Reuther, once a Ford worker himself, made Jus report on ne- gotiations with the company to an overflow crowd of elderly Detroit area Ford" workers to whom he had sent special invitations. About 700 others were turned away for lack of standing room. All but a few of them were 60 rears old and up. Some of them ad more than 40 years' seniority with Ford. Through frequent references to CIO President Philip Murray, Reu ther indicated his union's bargain 1 Ing strategy is closely coordinated with that of the CIO United Steel workers, which Murray also heads. Demands of the two big unions are much the same. Polk Crews RecoatRoad DALLAS, Aug. 21 - (Special) Polk county road rcews, taking advantage of favorable weather, resurfaced a major portion of the Orr's Corner road during the past week. The road, badly damaged by last winter's free7.es, links Dal las with highway 89-W south of Rickreall. Two coats f oil are being ap- K slied to most of the new section. some part where damage has been particularly, heavy, it has necessary to rip up the entire road base and rebuild completely. An estimated 25.000 gallons of oil will be needed to complete the project. One-way traffic has been maintained while the road crews are at work. Lale Sporli Ferrier Claims Tourney Toga GRAND RAPIDS. Mich Aug. 21 -(Tv- Big Jim Ferrier of San Fran cisco finally found his way into the winner's circle as he won the $15, 000 Grand Rapids Open Golf tour 'nament today with a 72 hole total Of 263. Ferrier s terrific 263 set a new PGA record for par 72 courses, as he broke the mark of 184 set by Craig Wood in 1940 in the Metro politan open in New York. . Ferrier had to play some nifty golf to turn back the challenge of E. J. Dutch Harrison. Harrison fired a 64 eight under par to match the mark set ear lier in the day by Chick Harbert of Detroit for a new record on the Cascade Hills country club. TRAC K STARS WIN ZURICH, Switzerland, Aug. 21 MVA teem cf touring American track stars won every event It entered today in a meet with a picked Swiss and French squad. Jimmy Fuchs tossed th shot 58 feet, im inches to better the s lting world record but later it was discovered th shot was not full weifht GEACIDAS POLO WINNERS CHICAGO, Aug. 21-iiVLed by the four Gr&cidas brothers a Mex ican polo team defeated the Oak Brook club, to 4, today in the first of three matches for the Noith America Cup. 1,11 Monday Xnqnai 21T 1943" Mcciori McCioy; It has been made available also to state department units that deal with American policies In Ger many. The document was drawn up by the military government's headquarters, division. 4 Part of the report deals with the staff needs facing Gen; Taylor, who will serve as troop command er as well as commandant He will also have frequent dealings with the Russians on four-power mailers. Temporarily Set Aside The section outlining ; tasks ahead indicates the authors con sider the Russians have put aside the "cold war" ax an Instrument of policy in Berlin only fof the mo ment The headquarters division listed as its major pro'.lem: "Constant political and economic conflict with the Soviet military admin istration, whose objective it com munistic control of Berlin and eventual political and economic control of Germany." After Blockade lifted I This conclusion was dated Aug ust 11 i long after the Russian blockade was lifted and long after Russia, the United States, Britain and France were supposed to be establishing a "Live and let live" philosophy here. ? The four commanders have fail ed in frequent meetings to reach single major agreement on nor malizing tlife in the split city. The west has made proposals which hang in the air and the Russians answered them only by submitting some of their own. The official military government newspaper, Die Neue Zeitung, said editorially Washington cirales al ready consider the four-power talks in Berlin as bogged down in failure, i U.N. Expense Account Due For Jump in 150 LAKE SUCCESS, Aug. IHJP-Secretary-General Trygve Lie es timated tonight it will cost $44.- 314.398 to operate the United Na tions next year. This la $605,293 more than the U. N. appropriated for 1949. i Deducting $5,106,525 expected in miscellaneous income. Lie set the net cost at $39,297,873. He told newsmen a carryover i from last year would account for; something over $1,000,000 more. ; About $38,000,000 finally will be required in assessments from the 59 member nations of the world organization, his aides said, to fi nance the Lake Success head quarters, the European office at Geneva, Switzerland- and the gen eral assembly for the year:' The United States is ths biggest contributor under th. system of assessments, based on : ability to pay. Its share of the 1949 appro priations total was about $1 7.000, 000, aside from contributions to specialized agencies not covered in the general budget. Russian, U. S. Workers' Pay Compared PARIS. Aug. 2W;p-Officials of the economic cooperation adminis tration (Marshall plan) here have issued a booklet comparing the purchasing power of the' Ameri can workingman with his counter part in the Soviet Union. The U. S. workingman comes off : much better in terms of working time required to buy needed com modities on the basis of the book let's figures. EC A officials said the booklet is based on the findings of two delegations from the 5 Norwegian general federation of trade unions which visited both the United States and Russia. Said the booklet: "A comparison of costs and wages shows that a Soviet worker in the ; steel and food factories mentioned would have to work a half day or more to pay for a kilogram of rye bread (slightly more than two loaves), two days for a kilogram (2.2 pounds) of beef. Two months wages would be required to buy a man's half wool suit, or a day arid a half to pay for- a pack of cigarettes." This was compared with the American worker who buy a loaf of bread with five minute work, a pound of meat with a half hour, a pound of butter with 40 min utes, a woolen dress with 13 hours and a man's woolen suit with 25 hours of wort. Peruvians Deny Connection with Narcotics Ring j SANTIAGO. Chile. Aug. 21-OIV Leaders here of the outlawed Peruvian Aprista party hay de nied charges the party is connected with an alleged narcotics smuggl ing ring in New York. " f ' VS. narcotics agents in New York ' yesterday arrested an American ship's steward of Peru vian descent. Twy said the rtew ard Eduardo BaLarezo, of; Great North River, Long Island, was the brains of an . alleged ring carrying on a i500,000-a-month illicit co caine trad between Peru and the VS. : i i t TV A AGE. 119 YEARS William Pringle (above), of Johaanesbarg. South Africa. mhm recently celebrated kit 119th birthday, is stilt active and hopes to live for many years. South France Forest Fires Take 80 Lives BORDEAUX, Franca, Aug. 21 Wjp)-Grim and weary soldier and civilians tonight battled forest fires in southern France which have taken more than 80 lives and burned over an estimated 100,000 acres. The fires are the worst disaster in France since 70 persons were burned to death in a theatre blaze at Malmaison two years ago. Paris newspapers put the num ber of those killed in the fires. which started southwest of Bor deaux. at close to 100. Many others have been seriously injured. Additional bodies of soldier fire fighters have been found burned beyond recognition. Latest reports listed more than 40 civilians and 40 soldiers found dead during week long struggle to halt the blaze. Companies of volunteer firemen were being rushed into the area tonight. Fresh colonial troops were being convoyed from the ancient fortress town of Caracasvmne. The bodies of 12 soldiers were found huddled together where they had been trapped yesterday by a sudden change of wind. Millionaire to Help Navy Vet Doomed to Die DETROIT. Aug. 21-CTV-Ernest G ilium. 34. appealed for help yesterday in finding a special kind of a job that a man doomed to di could fill. The 34-year-old navy veteran said he had a cancer and the doc tors had given him only six months to live. "I know I'm going to die soon," he said, "but the trouble is, I have to eat until I do. Gillum said today he had been given a "new lease on life." He kaid this is what,, happened after his story appeared m the news papers: A millionaire businessman, who asked that his name be kept sec ret, came to him and said: "I'm going to give you a job a good one. But first, I'm going to get you cured. The millionaire told him he knew of a doctor who had effect ed remarkable cancer cures in Europe and the United States. He is going to take him to the doctor this week to start a series of treatments. Afterward. Gillum said. "I'm go ing to take a permanent job. Not the temporary one I was looking for." Four Found In Stolen Car Two men and two Juveniles were jailed nere at 11:30 pjn, Sunday after a city patrolman ap piynded them in a car reported stolen from West Salem earlier the same day. . - I An four were charged with lar ceny of an auto. The men were Harvey William Hickman, 23, Sa lem route 4, box 546, and Adolph Thomas Tronson, jr., 20. of SileU. Ore. Both juveniles were 17 years old; one from Salem, the other from SileU. They were arrested at Bush' and South Commercial streets. One of the men resisted arrest and was brought to the station in hand cuffs, police reported. State police reported Hickman was a parolee from McNeil Is land prison In Washington. Theft of the car had been re ported Sunday afternoon by Has kel Byers, 642 Edgewater si. West Salem. Woman Falls 800 Feet Into Colorado Gorge CANNON CITY. Colo, 'Aug. 31 -OPMielen S. Smith, 49. of Larch mont, N.Y, fell 800 feet to her death today into a aide canyon of the Royal gorge. Three hours after she disappear ed from th tourist party, her shattered body was found at th bottom of the canyon. Nationalists Retake Gty in Canton Defense i By Speaeer CANTON. Monday, Aug. 22-(JP- The nationalists reported today an important comeback against a communist drive on Leiyang, 'a key point in the defense of Can ton. ! The: red's attempt to sever the Canton-Hankow railway at Lei yang not only has been beaten back, ; the nationalists asserted. but Najen has been retaken. Na jen, 30 miles northeast of Leiyang. safeguards the eastern flank of government defense operations in Hunan province. Recapture or wajen, the na tionalists said, was accomplished by a counterattack that pushed back ' one division of the com munist 45th army and, wiped out two of Its regiments. Leiyang is on the railway 230 miles : north of Canton. Its fall would have cut off from the cap ital the large forces based on Hengyang. 35 miles farther north. Another VlcUry Fifty miles northwest of Heng yang the nationalists laid -claim to another victory involving much larger numbers but possibly of less immediate tactical import ance. Gen. Pai Chung-Hsi's National ist defense army was credited with total destruction of the red 51st army of Gen. Lin Plao. One division of this red army has been reported wiped out three days earlier, and this was con firmed by reliable private sources. Today the nationalists said lhe re maining two divisions have been smashed. (This would represent a total loss to the reds of possibly 30,000 men if the divisions were at full strength.) To Relieve Pressure Such a victory should relieve at least temporarily the pressure on Pai's western flank and leave open his possible retreat route south west into his native Kwangsl province. On the eastern flank, the' na tionalists reported fierce fighting around Sinfeng, 180 miles north east of Canton. They denied pri vate reports that the reds had captured Sinfeng. The town is 55 miles east of communist-held Tayu, which is 170 miles from Canton and the nearest approach yet made by the red regulars to this capital. On the far northwestern front in Kansu province, news was less favorable to the nationalists. Foreign travelers said the rtds were firing into the airfield three miles outside the walls of Lan chow. provincial capital. They said Gen. Ma Pu-Fang, nationalist commander of the whole northwest region, had or dered abandonment of Lanchow. Police Seek Man Bearing Foot Injury Search for a man who stole a ' car and assaulted the owner in Salem late Saturday was intensi fied by city police Sunday when his description tallied with that of a man listed on another police report. A dispatcher for a Salem taxi firm told authorities a man came to the office and told her he had been shot in the foot by a police man and was "in trouble with the law". He did not state in what city the trouble occurred and left when he suspicioned police were being called Hi. voluntary ad- mission oi nis irouoies was at tributed to the fact he had been drinking. Ervin J. Sisk, Salem general delivery, victim of the assault and car theft, described his assailant as having a foot injury and other wise conforming to the description of tl.e man mentioned on the other report. PGE Adds to Power Output At lnionvale UNIONVALE, Aug. 21-(Special) -Portland General Electric com pany has just completed installa tion of capacitor banks at the Un- ionvale sub-station. The banks will provide additional capacity and help stabilize the voltage. At the Grand Island junction a set of automatic switches have been installed designed to autom atically re-energize the line im mediately following a temporary short circuit, such as tree limb fall ing across the line or wires swing ing together during a heavy wind storm. A considerable amount of tree trimming work in the Grand Is land area is planned by PGE with bids already called for and a con tract to be let very soon, accord ing to Division Manager M. E. Duns ton. A lizard can grow a new tail if its original one becomes' detached. Ufa Go Roller Skating Tonit ! (JjjTN dy Syring j yyrl save Vy CLt nmma ijJLf Children ITader 12- II CAPITOIA ROUEX RINK ft Lama Ave. Take Capital Baa WCTl) States Drinking Brought On Disasters in PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 21 - WV ance union was told tonight that drinking brought on a host of "dis asters and near-disasters to the allied armies" in world war two. In an address at WCTtTs 75th national convention. H. Cecil Heath of London, general secretary ance) alliance, asserted: -Authorities are trying to ob scure the part played by alcohol during world war two in all sec tions of the armed xorces oi every belligerent state." -The unpleasant truth," Heath said, "can be discovered irom court martial records and other official archives." Disclosed Date And, said Heath: It is unnecessary to remind an American audience of the part drink played in the Pearl Harbor ntenrie. nor to enlarge on the fact that an American Major General was reduced to the rank of Lieu tenant Colonel and sent home from Europe for disclosing the date of the invasion at a cocktail party. "He had been one of the com manders of the American air force in Britain." As to Pearl Harbor, the British temperance leader said "it is com mon knowledge that there was widespread drunkenness there the night of December 6, 194 L" Liquor Everywhere He quoted Christopher J. Benny as telling a house-committee invest ti gating the Japanese sneak at tack that "lienor was everywhere" and that "the streets were jam med by soldiers and sailors stag gering from one bar to another." Heath said some sources re ported that about 55 per cent of the 841 places licensed to sell liquor were operated by persons of Jananese ancestry. One, Heath said, was less than 100 yards from the U. S. military installation ai Schpfield barracks. Government of Chile Claims Revolt Halted SANTIAGO. Chile. Aug. 2l-(Ph The government claimed "com plete control" throughout Chile to day and breaking of what it term ed an attempted revolutionary ac tion based on a general strike. President Gabriel Gonzalez VI dela's regime disclosed that a nation-wide roundup of communist agitators was underway. No figures virrt released on the number ar- ! rested, but officials said ringiea- ders would be dispersed to re mote parts of the country. That means exile. Yesterday the government or dered a state of emergency a form, of martial law thoughout the nation, and sent troops and 11 warships to occupy and guard coal, copper and nitrate mines in the north and south. The action was taken after four days of disorders in Santiago over an increase' in bus fares which resulted in three deaths and in jury to about 300 persons. The government alleged the disorders were inspired by communists who planned to incite a nation-wide strike of railroad, bank and civil service workers. Today the ministry of interior reported that 1100 coal miners who entrenched themselves in th ; Lota coal mine, conception prov l ince, where communist leadership i is strong, were abandoning their sitdown strike. The miners wer running short of water and were leaving In small groups. : r TT j UlSeaSC HllS Bean Crop in Puyallup Area PUYALLUP. Aug. 21 (JP)- A disease .that attacks beans threat ening to diminish a harvest al ready far below normal is being watched In the Puyallup Valley. Tests began Friday at the west ern experiment station by two specialists to isolate the germ which seems to cause pole snap beans to wilt or their leaves to burn. The experts, Dr. R. M. Har ris and Dr. Leo Campbell, hope to nam the disease soon. With some 650 acres of beans planted In the valley, the wilting and burning of leaves could do much to ruin the harvest, Mor- ! rill Delano, assistant county agent ' said The crop is later than usual. Approximately 2.400 tons of . beans will be trucked to canneries t from farms that still have many unpicked fields. Delano estimated that 65 percent of the crop has been harvested. Growers original ly expected something like 4,500 tons pf varieties as the Blue Lake. Hope for saving the bean crop lies in cooler weather, according to the county agent. LIGHTNING FIKE QUELLED ENTERPRISE, Ore, Aug. 21-iJf) Fire crews brought under control today a lightning set fire in th Wallowa National forest. About 60 men worked the fire lines and slowed the blaze after it scorched 150 acres. Other spots were quick ly corraled. ' J TT Theatre WOOPBURN. ORE. How Playing! . "Johnni Belinda , With Jaxi Wyman Lew Ayr World War II - The Woman's Christian Temper of the United Kingdom (temper Patton Asks Businessmen, Farmers Join (Story also on page 1) Family-type farmers and small businessmen should "join hands" in their light to keep going ac cording to the American way of life," James G. Patton, president of the National Farmers union, t?ld members of the Oregon Farm ers union Sunday. Speaking at the state organiza tions annual picnic at Champoeg state park Patton stated that agriculture has gone on a cash basis. Most farmers have paid off their debts and created a reserve, he pointed out. He urged further fight against the ''ever increasing rate in which farm life was changing to a type of business away from a form of life" and becoming "nothing more than a way of making money." The national figure compli mented the Oregon Farmers un ion picnic Sunday as still being "a farmer's community gathering not controlled by can openers and paper bag lunches bought at a de licatessen on the way to the pic nic. Clackamas Farmers union members were hosts to the na tional president and the state of ficers and their wives at the noon picnic prior to the program. Ronald E. Jones, president of the Oregon Farmers union, intro duced Patton. Vocal music was furnished by Mrs. Claire Fowks of Adair Village, accompanied by Evelyn Sainsbury, the state Jun ior leader, who also led in group singing and accompanied the Su ver Spinners of Marks Prairie, a group of youthful drum major ettes, in drill. Patton and his son Robert, who have been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jones since their arrival Friday, left Sunday night for California. Plane Plant Strike Averted At Last Minute BURBANK. Calif.. Aug., 21-(V! A strike at the Lockheed Aircraft Corp. plant here was averted at the last minute today when union em ployes voted to accept the com pany's latest proposals on wages and working conditions. John Snider, president of the Lockheed local. International As sociation of Machinists, an inde pendent union, said the major fea ture of the agreement is a blanket wage increase of five cents an hour. Negotiators worked out the ten tative agreement yesterday and submitted it to the union today for ratification. A week ago, the work ers turned down a previous man agement offer and authorized un ion leatfers to give a five day strike notice. That foreshadowed a walk out today. A similar situation exists at the Douglas Aircraft Co. plants at San ta Monica and El Segundo. Nego tiations are still in progress at three North American Aviation, Inc., plants. The IAM and Douglas reached a tentative agreement yesterday. Un ion members will vote on the pro posals tomorrow and Tuesday, and negotiators indicated today they expected acceptance of th con tract. Drunk Fare Slugs Cabbie A Salem Max! driver told city police he wais assaulted early Sun day by a passenger who had been ordered out of the cab because he was drunk. R. G. Rickets. Brooks route 1, said the passenger struck him on the back of the head when he stopped a short distance from South Commercial and Trade streets, where he had picked the man up. Rickets said th next thing he remembered he was sit ting in his cab at Leslie and South High streets. No theft was re ported. Motorists Give Gorge Road Heavy Workout TROUTDALE, Ore, Aug. 21-) Motorists gave the new, water level Columbia Gorge highway east of here a heavy workout to day. The new 10.6 mile section was opened yesterday. State police said most of the travel moved- eastward on the water-level route and circled back over the old route over Crown Point New Shewing Oyea 6:4S Featare Brethers la the gagale with Tim Halt Reds Assert FinnsPrepare War on Russ By Teddy Rosenthal HELSINKI. Finland. Aug. 2M;P) -The communists' official news paper charged today that Finnish police action against communist led strikers is aimed to preparing for war against the Soviet Union. The charge was made by the party organ, Tykansan Sanomat. This followed up the party's call yesterday for anti-government ral lies to protests against the "ter ror, violence and murders" which communists said attended efforts of the government to end th strikes. The strike front was obviously weakening. The only major clash announced was th brush Thurs day between strikers and police at the lumbering town of Emi, where one man was killed and nine in jured. The walkouts, which Premier Karl August Fagerholm's social democratic government charged were aimed at laying the ground work tor a communist coup, lost potency under back-to-work or ders by Finland's central trad union federation. Gaps la Lines Anti-communist newspapers re ported unanimously that the strike lines were showing great gaps and more workers were returning to their jobs. Fresh bread was available in sat isfying quantities. Prrttieally all bakeries were expected to be back in operation Monday morning. From 90 to 95 per cent of the brewery strikers resumed work. Lumbermen and log floater in all except one district were back on the job and dockers resumed work at several ports. The communists had hoped to pull out at least 100,000 of Fin land's 300,000 unionized workers in a day-by-day strike movement, but the peak figure was estimated in mid-week at 45,000. Violate Treaty Communist newspapers followed up the theme of the party execu tive committee, which notified Pre sident Juho K. Paaikivi yester day that the antKstrike measures of the government"openly violate provisions of the peace treaty" which Finland signed with Russia .and Britain in 1944. (This treaty provides that disputes over Inter pretations shall be settled by Bri tain and Russia with the aid of some other nation if the two are unable to agree.) Tykansan Sononat said "the po lice terror' aimed at crushing peace loving elements In order to prepare the way for war against Russia. Race Driver's Wife Injured In Car Crash FENNY STRATFORD, England, Aug. 21 Mrs. Daphne Camp bell, wife of Speed Driver Donald Campbell, was Injured serious ly today In an automobile colli sion. She suffered severe cuts and shock. She was driving to London from Lake Coniston, where her hus band made an unsuccessful bid last week to better his father's water speed record of 141.74 miles an hour. Fenny Stratford is Just outside London. Campbell was riding In another automobile when the accident oc curred. Labrador Is the most easterly part of the American continent. -pjitmYtirTA RIGHT NOW! Gd EE&nS G0IHLA AS CITE CLC3 PET! CMrars 2nd Hit ! "Make Mine Laughs" Last Day I "The Feuataiahead "Uadereerer Man" NEW TOMORROW 1 Celer by Technieelor .And J; tniHP Gets College Degree Via Insect Bites WACO, Tex., Aug. 21--CaroT McCall got her college degree the hard way. She handled 3,000 wasps. She allowed wasps, bees and red ants to bite her and even managed to persuade her friends to allow the insects to sting them. Miss McCalL of Temple. Tex., studied the effects of insect bite to write her master's thesis. She received her advanced degree in biology this week. , She discovered, she said, that most folks have no need to fear a wasp sting except for the mom entary pain it causes. Fatalities or serious illness occur only in rare instances when the indivi dual person is allergic to the venom. If you ar allergic to pollen. food proteins, or otheriactors, th chances are that yoii ar allergi to wasp venom, Miss McCall theo rizes. Navy Air Unit Pilots Request Flight Orders Reserve pilots of Salem's nei volunteer navy air unit are speed ing applications for flight orders, anticipating arrival early next month of training planes from Seattle. Twelve local pilots flew to Seat tie in a navy transport Saturday to take physical examinations The men returned to Salem Saturday night to complete the six-hour round-trip. Ten members of the Salem unit already have been cleared for fly ing by the bureau of personnel in Washington, D. C. and the chief of naval air reserve training at Glen view. III. About 30 other men are awaiting clearance orders; Lt. Comdr. Wallace Hug of th naval air facility said Sunday planes have been promised from Seattle as soon as the local reserve unit is set to fly. Hug was in Seattle three days last week ar ranging details for the transfer. Maintenance equipment for th planes also is In Seattle but must be cleared by the bureau of cup- ply before transfer to Salem can be effected, Hug said. Ethiopia's royal family claims to have descended from King Solo mon and the Queen of Sheba. NOW SHOWTNO Free Shetland Feny Rides for the Kid dies Starting Dally At S TM. Cliftea Webb Shirley Temple MR. BELVEDERE GOES TO COLLEGE" - Virginia May Zaehary Scott "FLAXY MARTIN" tit Mat. Dally frem 1 r. M- NOW SHOWING! i Thrin Co-HUl tear calmou u rr tow OPENS 6:45 P.M. KMX o a MUiei CO-FEATURE! f wm rwwi mtmr, New! Ovems :5 TM. ' Gene Tlerney ; -BELLE STARR" I i Randolph Scott t TRorrrna marshal" 117 'nvcKnnwnlei i if 8tJ M Vir. LOO Mm