f ! 51 Pledged by i I. Fraternities at Willamette U. Forty six freshman and five upper cLaaamen at Willamette un iversity hare been pledged by men's fraternities. Dp an of Stu dents Raymond A. Withey. Jr announced Saturday at the end of freshman oriental' on week. Of the number piedrjnt M pled red Sienna Alpha Epsilon: 14 phi Delta Theta. "and 11 Sirma Chi. Beta Theta Pi. fourth national fraternity on the Willamette cam pus, will not resume rusnin until October 1. 7 The cledee lWt included: Sigma Alpha Epsilon Frank Riebe, Portland: Frank Blank. Douglass Dotujhcrtv. Joeph For mirk. WarreniMuIkey, Ear! Phiops, Jim 5 Svvttrer and Henry Wilson. Salem; Hujh Nelson and Jim Wood, Albany: Dave Berry, CorvalUs; Ernest Duvall; Silver ton; Tommy Edwards and Paul hrader. Tafl' John Grabow and Bill Hess, Medford: Don Gunther, Kedmond: Stanle Lawrence, Oak Grove; Jim McIIale. Newberg; Robert Sanders, Roseburr, Jerry Stinson.Clatsknie; Ken Sutter, Alsea: Don Hosford. North Platte. ' Neb.; John Skima?, Camas. Wash.; y Ward Stanton. Sacramento, Caul.. and Robert Ulrlch, Garner, Iowa. Phi Delta Theta Richard Cock ing, Rollin Cocking. Roger Hawley and Loren Sawyer, Salem; Rob ert Hilmer, John Piper and Don Rjan, Portland; George Collins, Eagle Creek; Mark Cotton. Canby; Glenn Duus, Estacada; Ray Mey ers, S,ilverton; Robert Taylor, Co quille; George Buland, Palo Alto, Calif., and Norman LawwmBow, Wash. Sigma Chi-Jack Kickel, Elton Lafky, Jack Larsen, Philip Rin gle, jr., Tom Scheidel and Robert Wilson Salem; Joe Bonavit-. in ward Jarman and Richard Ruff, Portland; Jack Hande, Tiverton and Jim Hartley, Grass Valley. Slot Machine Evidence Gut In Lodge Trial STLVERTON. Sept lt-(Spe-cial) -Judge Alf O. Nelson today refused to admit as evidence a gainst Salem Eagles lodge officers slot machines seized in a raid by Salem police and Marion county authorities at clubrooms earlier this year. The ruling sustained a motion in Silverton justice court, where the preliminary hearing on gam bling charges against five lodge officers is being conducted. Nelson's decision, based on the contention that the search warrant employed by District Attorney Ed ward O. Stadter, jr., was void, or dered all the paraphernalia ' re turned to the lodge with exception of the slot machines. Stadter obtained the warrant for the raid on a sworn statement : stating "to the best of his know ledge and belief information Vin dicated gambling was being4 con ducted at the lodge. Nelson ruled that actual knowledge, not re ports secured from other persons, ! innst be obtained. Nelson gave the district attorney 10 days in which to file a rebuttal to the "defense attorney's motion to bar the seized equipment as evidence in the trial. 13 Doctors at State Hospital Oregon state hospital now has 13 fuTMime physicians, the larg est number since before the war, William Ryan, coordinator of state institutions, reported Saturday to Gov. Douglas MrKay. There also is one part-time phy sician, a part-time pathologist and an intern. Ryan said the Oregon state hos pital is one of a few in Oregon full accredited by the American medical association. In the Minneapolis telephone book the Olsons outnumber the Smiths, 1.648 to 1,080. ! SM 'V . j , v 'i - v ' . f u I ' - -f J - -J, i I . ' t- l- ' r : V "i , ' :yr -- -t . T. - - .. .......... -., - , - SHOELESS DANCERS-;. ckeck Ueir kes Uc ai eveeh? of fcsrefcet danrfng by iraiwrr eettagers at the Nars liead Cck Club, aa as bland eff taw KorUi CnUm Msk ''" ' " f ''"'"'"'"V " ' " - '- - i ' . - '- -. - ' v " mmmmmimw m mm,n " mmm-n pip i iMsMMaiM .... , , . - '' ..-.....'; y '-';-. - - ' . , - - . - - ; ! ' ' 1 V - f f t ' K " ' n ( ' j REDSKINS ON PAR AD E AntcrVaa Indiaaa to txUUonaI attfre walk the streets of TlitiUtt. Arliona, In the' procesaion that was the t eatare X the amnaal Indiaa Paw-wew cereaiies. It - -f ' h. .( f j r i ' , i . ' n j 5 :. . : i , j ' ' ' ; , rv- . SCOUTS LTXK N ABOUT THf D E S E R TAnteriraa) Cuk Seeats, tens of Arabian Asoemaa uu empiojrea is saadi Hungarians Confess Details of Tito-Baclsed' Scheme of Revolt i .By Eadre. Mart a BUDAPEST, Hungary Sept 17 P-Plans for a night of terror in which Hungarian and Yugoslav plotters were to kill key commun ists and seize the government were related by two treason trial de fendants here today- Lzar Brankov, 37-year-old counsellor of the Yugoslav embassy in Budapest, testified officials of Premier Marshal Tito's regime de Color-Scheme i Consultant to Talk at Store A nationally -known color scheme consultant, Clara Dudley, will give talks at Woodry : Furni ture 'store Thursday and Friday on "how to decorate on a low budget" the store management has announced. Representing the Alexander Smith & Sons Carpet firm. Miss Dudley will speak at 2 pjn. both days and also be available with out charge for consultation on home decorating problems. A movie in color, describing opera tions of her home decorating ad visory service, will be a part of the program. Copies of Miss Dud ley's color-idea book Will be pre sented those attending. Using a variety of rugs,; togeth er with various fabrics,, wallpa pers and paint colors. Miss Dudley will show her audiences how to achieve the three basic types of color combination blending, con trasting and accented Arabia, arc Uagai kew to aumat a cided last October that peaceful methods were not enough to con vert Hungary into a Yugoslav satelite and "other methods should be used." These other methods, he said, included the dispatch of "two ex perts in political murder" to Bud apest to shadow the communist chieftains and kill them when the revolt signal was given. Yugoslavia has denounced the trial in advance as a fake. Eight men, headed by Laszlo Rajk, are up before a five-judge people's court on charges of treason and espionage. Brankov and Lt Gen. Gyorgy Pal fly made public confessions be fore the court, speaking with the same alacrity Rajk displayed yes terday. Brankov pleaded "partly guilty." Palffy said -guilty." The paunchy general, 40, test ified he had maneuvered Hungar ian army affairs in an effort to support of the plot He said he hoped the revolt would lead to creation of a "western type cap italist democracy." Supporting the government's charge that Britain and the United States were involved, Brankov said all the secret Infor mation obtained by Yugoslavia's Hungarian agents was turned over to thte U. S. legation here and leading Yugoslavs also exchanged information with their British counterparts. Both he and the general said Alexander Rankovie. interior min ister and police chief of Premier Marshal Tito's Yugoslav govern ment was the brains behind the plans for assassination of key com munists and a revolution as part of a move to pull the Balkans from the Soviet sphere. Brankov charged that Allen W Dulles, wartime head of the office of strategic services (OSS) in Eu rope during World War II, was linked with the purported plot He said Winston Churchill. Brit ain's wartime prime minister, sought early in the war to pro mote Anglo-American influence in Yugoslavia and Hungary through spying. Eight men are on trial for trea son and espionage in the case. (Last Saturday Dulles said ref erence to him in the indictment against the men was "a fairy story as far as I am concerned.") Suspended; Term Given James Byron Blake, 21., Coos Bay. was handed a two-year sus pended sentence to Oregon state prison Saturday on a charge of bo-iary not in a dwelling. Marion County Circuit Judge G-orge Duncan placed him on three years probation. Bl?ke is charged with esterinc; the Top Hat cafe on State street. 1 I rHiT f -f 1 eaiael by BetUuins at Dkahxaa. Miss Oregon Back Home THE DALLAS, Sept. ll-4JPh Miss Oregon was back home today. tired from the Miss America con test at Atlantic City, but eager to start college as a freshman. The 18-year-old Beverly Faith Krueger is planning to enter the University of Oregon to study dra matics. Of the Atlantic City contest she said, "I wouldn't go through that again, but it was wonderful." Municipal Power Supply Assured For Springfield EUGENE, Springfield's Ore, Sept 17-.-P)- proposed municipal 1 power system was assured today oi a power supply. The Bonneville administration delivered a contract to John W. Boeshans, city council president, guaranteeing to meet Springfield's neeas, whatever they develop to be. ; "The city has announced it in tends to have its system operating by January, 1950. Even if it has to compete with the Mountain Power company, now operating here. The first Labor Day celebra tion was held in New York City Sept 5, 18S2. X Jada awaatar la Haa 'ymotL It laca af araal aaiaa. i Tkia ftaaa 11 Z?Z2 I' ! H Empty all the museums and treasure-trovea ci the land. Heap high the glittering gems. Yet the whole fantastic array is-worth less than the gift of sound health. If health be yours, rejoice in the treasure. And guard well your priceless possession. At the first aaggestioa of illness, go at once to the physician of your choice. And when yoa . have his prescription entrust its com ponnding to this "Reliable" pharmacy. Capital Sfn Big 3 Agree On Plan to Halt Reds in East Be FJhranl 1 WASHINGTON. SeoC 17 Secretary Acheron. Britwh For- eiga Secretary Bevin and French Foreign Minister Sehuman reach ed agreement today on plans to check the snread of corranarnsm in the Far East Tbev announced accord after a 9V minute conference at te state denatment which wound un a det.iper bf th-ee survev of press ing cold war political ismes fac inf the wet. In tNvr fil exchange deal in' with te Far Eat a brief comraur.Mjtoe sakl te three "fotmd that thetr ews on exist ing situations and the rrctho-5 by which they might be met were fai accord." There were no further details. In that reason. France's most urgent concern is with continuing turmoil in Indo-Chlna. Schuman asked for tbe final meeting ater he had gone over Furooean and Balkan problems with the Amer ican and British leaders. , On the ont'ook in IndChina. Schuman told reoorter? he was "almost always ootimistir" and declined to add further to the guarded words of the communi que. ' iBeeaetstsive Res Its In Indo-China. France has had inconclusive results thus far with an effort to deal -with the situa tion by extending local self-government The communist-led Viet nam movement is still actively fighting the french-suooorted government of former Emperor I Bao Dai. ! Schuman presumably acceoted ; major American and British p'an for dealing with tre Far Eat imhearal resulting frorn World War II and the communis sweep in China. As thev have been dis closed piecemeal since Aheson and Bevin started their talk on Tuesday, before Schuman's arriv al, the plans are understood au thoritatively to include: Japanese seaee treaty Prepa rations are to be speeded by both the state department and the British foreign office, be asked again soon Kussia may IU asm an early conference in which all the active wartime fots of Japan would take part China The U. S. and Britain have written off as useless for the time being any idea of giving active aid to remaining anti-communist elements in China. From these elements are likely to come additions to the communist band wagon, it is believed, but a re versal of the trend is looked for beginning possibly in another year or two. Tiiam Reports stress that the influx or some 300.000 na tionalist troops and hordes of refugees from the mainland have upset the . island's economy and raised the peril that it will go communist. A firm decision what to do about this strategic Hand appears to have been put off. Sexrtheast Asia Britain and France support in principle Ache son's policy of supporting nation alist forces as barriers against further spread Of communism. Both, however, have big colonial interests in that part of the world and the British fail to see eye to eye with the U. S. in some instances on what local elements should be supported. Amity Woodcraft Team Drill In Portland AMITY Myrtle Circle 68, Neighbors of Woodcraft drill team, under Captain Fay Morrison and flag bearer, Mary Bertiro, parti cipated in. exhibition drills at the grand session of the order, held in Portland Thursday. The team received a grand ova- j tion and much favorable comment ; for their showing. The captain was presented with $85 for ex pen- ; ses. Mrs. Gertie Richter was musi- j cian for the team. Mrs. Cordia j Morrison, grand representative for : district 21, attended all the es-; si oris this week. ! 1 i Drug Store & tiberty :1 ! 4 Jilted Professor Convicted of Attempting to Murder Nurse By Abbsoi Adkinson COLUMBIA, S. C, Sept. 17-vPr-Russen B. alaxey Was convicted tonight ot trying to murder the nurse woo scorned his love. He could be senteeced to life in prison. The meek-Looking little professor beard the verdict with the same store elm he has maintained all this week, . A jury that was out kess than an hour found him guQty of burglary Recruiter ' ) 1 1 ., t i i 4 A veteran of 17 yean with the leathernecks. M. Srt C J. Gras iaaw (abeve) has arrived in Sa lem to be n-eeii iwianril of ficer in charge of the marine re c raiting station. He cames here from Mare Island, after service with the 2nd marine division. GOP Considers Fighting Judge 0 0 0 Appointment v WASHINGTON. Sept. Key republicans nadn t made up , their minds today whether to fight , president Truman's appointment . , Minton to the supreme court Senato Wherry of Nebraska, the GOP "Door leader, told a re porter it will be up to Senator Jenner (R-Ind) to signal whether party members pitch in to oppose a former Indiana senator who took a leading part irt. President Roos evelt's iD-starred effort to revamp the supreme court In 19T7. Jenner told a reporter he hadn't decided whether he wiH fight Min tion, who served as senator from 1933 until 1340 when he was de feated for reelection. Wherry said that since Jenner Is a member of judiciary commit tee and Minton fs from the Same state, other republicans were look ing to Jenner for directions on the appointment Stayton Qub Incorporates Articles of incorporation for West Stayton Women's Club. Inc were filed with the Marion county clerk Saturday by a group of Aumsville women. Purpose of the club is "civic bet terment of the community. Sign ing the articles were Lera S nod dy, Grace Nienke, June Ruggles, Jennie Schaefer, Edna Wilkinson, Dorothy Ruggles and Ada Stewart. The coconut palm is found htfuauco itc ft-iiit CTritc arr? i rar. ried to new locations by the sea. h -V V ' 3 Il's as easy as USUIG A PHOIIE . . . To use Statesman CLASSIFIED ADS! Just pick up your phono . . dkd 2-2441 and a crrpabie. courteous ad taker wiU help yoa phrai your ad lor the maximum advertising effect at a minimum cost. Ceo tmnly, well bo aksd to bill you later. Remember merely DIAL 22441 Low Cos! Bales Pee lino for 1 day Pee lino for 3 days Pee lino for 7 days . (Count 5 words to Minhntrm ad Is Or. if yoa prefer write or A Bny ... Sell ... Trade Willi OCEGOII tt State gman. Salem; Oregon. with intent to commit murder and of assault with intent to kill in the savage pistol-whipping of Ann B. Pierce. Miss Pierce had left fee court house where Vlaxey's sensational i irvai aiuranea capacity erowas j through its four-day run. Maxeys wue and her two sisters were there when the Jury announced its j decision. nue maes race Mrs. alaxey kid her face in her hands. The defense had pictured Maxey 1 1 and Miss Pterce as spatting lovers. The state says he tried to kill the buxom nurse who posed nude for his camera, lt asked a life prison term. "Turn him loose and let him ko back to the woman (Mrs. Maxey, the professor's entranged wife who had sat by him through the trial) who has that real, un dving love." Defense Attorney Clint T. Graydon pleaded. "I feel as sorry for that little woman Mrs. Maxey) as anyone in the world." Solicitor (State Pro secutor) T. Lou Tavlor countered. "We will do her a big favor if we get rid of that thing pointing at Maxey. Ts-Hes Festr Honrs The arguments and judge's charge took nearly four hours. Under sometimes heavily sar castic cross-examination by Tav lor. Mixev reneatedlv said "in the eves of God fhe and Mi P'rce) were living a m.nn aort wife." And he maintained, he was "ready and wi"ine to many her" riiiht up nntil August 3 when the state charge, he bept her ed al most to a miln with a pistol. SItoped n Fare Derribini wst he said was his fight with Miss Pio-ce. Maxey ;a?d ft started when "he slaDed mv face." t Maxey de'.red M;rr Pierre ; "new-lv rot the best c' te fieh" ' i until he s-!-ted tiint his nistol ' fnr a club. He said he, was paH-; lv imfonscimjs wher the seirs I effrre rearherf te hoe. I r.rydon had pe?ed hi defense ! of Maxey on the thecv his client ! co'd not be euiltr of burglary. Miss Piere eave h"m a Ve to ber ho'e aru neve- forh"e him the prerrve. Msrev trifled. Auto Licenses Still Expire December 31 Public confusion regarding ex piration of 1949 automobile lic enses has prompted a reminder from Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry that all current licenses expire December 31 as in previous years. Blamed for the confusion are the Nrcnewal schedules covering the permanent plates and stag gered Registration issued by the secretary of state's office. These schedules show the different iees i : and expiration dates for the 195(VJ j plates. j Many owners apparently have ' I concluded that the expiration date i on the schedule refers to pre- ; sent plates, Newbry reported. When the 1950 plates have been . obtained, thev will remain on the ; ; v hi , f fWt. s Each sub. , ... . i sequent renewal will be due on the month of the year shown on the plate, A current year tab will i Oe added to the license to keep it up to date. the Use) 2 Uses -406 70t visit oar oflce. STATESIIAII I ' ""IS.-. ' I i v- - - 7' I - " ' - . -. ( V - v - t w-r, , I y . r 'f v i Sunday. Sepfember It. 194-1 1 1; Oregon Flying Businessmen j Plan Lon Trip PORTLAND. Ore. Sept 17-U1) -Oregon's flying businessmen an nounced plans today for another transcontinental mass flight of light? lane pilots and their families. This time the Oregon fliers will visit Havana, Quba via stops in Nevada, AriJona, aexas. Louisiana and Florida between Feb. 25; 1950 and March 4. The longest were to Mexico, to Alaska and the Artie circle and to Portland, Me. Inhabitants of the sub-surface, ocean are noisy. During the war, the navy had to "screen out" noises of ocean creatures so that its instruments for detecting sub marine sounds could work effect ively. 4 Finance Co. Fi LiceaM S-Zll and M-Ztt Feraanal and Ant Leans We Want Your Always a Dependable Cas Market. If yoB danl bring tbem ta Corly's we bath lose. Curly's Dairy Fairgrounds Koad. at flood lh. S-S7U Or T T iMm.n D Or O Otaa.M D DBS. CHAN LAM CUINFS nEEBALISTS X41 North Liberty Vpttxir erUaS Georrat FArttrU Cm Otrir aalarSay mmij It sat t 1 p.aa ( 1 p m Cmmw ' ntooS rMr 4 art icaCa sra fr ml charg rractfrcfl 1911 Fistula (riles -IrmorrTMids) Corrected withoat , bMpHausatien Ouicli Relief Free Descriptive Booklet Dr. R. Reynolds Clinic Nat are-Rectal Specialist 1141 Center St rhane 3-ftfit Why Suffer Any I-ongcr MUM lUwri UK. r CbUkmm ranlti Amt1m aaccna far CaaC rear ta CMaa. Na raUr mHh taat illanu ra ar aflUrtra 1lorSers. claaslUs. feart, !. r. kiSacy. lu. roaatfaailoa. nicer itatatas. racoaiaUaaa. ran aa klaS tcr frrrr tfetm. f la roaaalalriti CHARLIE CHAN CU1NKSP. BERB CO. 94 N Caramcretal Pkaaa S-int SA1XM. OBJl ufTlca Baars I to I Tun. u4, SaL wily Hit f ." w-f? a -4:' I