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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1949)
x in awwinnin, atuinij vfoyoix. ruuuy. nunianri in iw - - -"t t 1 J Ik X I PIPELINE CONFERENCE Thlscs are eaitc sr.weie4 la this Berlin sewer pipe aa after-schMl "Jam teuton" Naval Airman Dies In Parachute Leap CONDON, Ore., Nov. 10 A parachuting naval airman died In a north central Oregon wheat Held laat night. His body was found at, dawn today. Six .others aboard, the faltering our-englned plane 'survived un lurt. Two leaped and four rode the plane down in the darkness to Its crash landing 18 miles north I here. Two ol those who parachuted landed safely and made their way to a ranch house. Search was start ed for the missing 'chutist and at dawn sheriffs "party found his body. He was 20-year-old Dono van H. Ear hart of Pipestone, Minn. Judge Finds 'Write Way' to Slow Down 'Speeding Drivers SUFFOLK, Va. - (INS) - Trial justice Marsnau cow a en thinks j he has found the "write way to impress speeders and reckless 5 drivers.- " . ,-. He sentenced Lewis Belote, 20, ' . . s . m . vi Accomic, ina ueorge saunon, longhand copies each of the article Danger Teen -Age Killers At The Wheel, in the Reader's Digest'- The .two youths agreed their slight case of writer's cramp might be a good cure for speeder's foot. Armistice Day Danco Tonight Wayne) Strachan'a Orchestra VFWHall Hood ind Church Its. Open Houm Frem 12 Neen Grand Opiaing fiD Saturday Cciionwccds GLEN WOODRrS .. ORCHESTRA NO NAME BALLROOM (Former Location of Club Combo) Featuring Claude Bird and His Orchestra Saturday Nito Plenty of Free Parking At Rear of Building- v. Dancing for All Agesl lance ARMISTICE DAY DANCE " "';:.:: , I i Tonite, November 111 j AUMSVILLE PAVILION Tommy Kizziah and His j West Coast Ramblers as a trio of yonofsters ho!4 en arithmetic problems. Veteran Bellboy Recalls Biggest Tip An Automobile I ?! LONG BEACJH, Calif -(&)-Twenty-six years ago John Pruden found work that suited him. He's been "hopping ttells" ever since. "Some mert go through life and never find the job they enjoy," says Pruderi. "I may be a profes sional parasite but I love jt Pre been offered other positions, but when a man finds the job he's happy doing he shpuld hang on to it-" . I John is bell captain at the La fayette Hotel, and;; he'll have you know that there s a difference be tween a bell hop and a bell man. "Any hick from the sticks," a he puts it, can grab a suitcase and be a bell boy. You become a bell man when you realize the import ant thing is to keep the guest happy. i I - His biggest tip? f An automobile from a guest (whom he won't name) who had to leave town suddenly and liked Johnny's ser vice.' i I College Class Features Hot Jazz Artists .CLEVELAND, -INS)- Every Thursday evening:! the music that set two generations of Americans on their ear drifts from the hal lowed halls of Cleveland college and the strange part of it is that there's a class going on. On those; nightsli newspaperman and former .musician Julian Kraw check lectures night students on music. But his music is the music that creeps; along the spine, raises the temperature of the blood and brings tears to the eyes. - His music is jazz, beloved alike by those who make it along the dingy New Orleans waterfront, and by those who pack Carnegie Hall to listen to the best. Krawcheck brings In as guest lecturers such artists as Bobby Hackett, a man born with a trum pet! Cow-Cow Davenport,, pianist and blues composer, and the Dixie Dandies, termed by Downbeat the beet Dixie-land band in the coun try. I Krawcheck and his rabid fol lowing trace jazz through the years and through the country, stopping off at Memphis, Whitman, Chicago, Fats Waller, New York, Krupa, speakeasies, Satchmo Armstrong and Carnegie Hall. The course, which costs $8 a semester and carries no credit for a oegree, u nuea .acn wees wiw an intense audience, noise and nostalgia. 1 - -j Wife Blames Comic Books for fDivorce SALT LAKE CItY-(INS)-A di vorce petition filed in a Salt Lake district court charged the husband "frequently purchased comic books by the dozen and sat and read them all day and refused to take care of. the baby or work around the house.". 1 The petitioning wife charged the comic books caused her young husband to "fail and refuse . . . to accept the responsibility of being the head of the family." DAIICE Salnrday High! Aumsvllle PcrrUlion Tommy and His West Coast j Ramblers ; teflSdt II mi 1JC. of Salem ea Highway: Ne. til Trucks Can !!': i- ' ( iijt ' , ' " L ' ' 1 5 . i ' - i - - - . ,1 A ' . - w i - - - . J " , .-i .---s; x - - x - 4I !-. ' nmm,'s'.' V .'-j ':''',;''V'J;'Vl'ltff:1 f v. , . ' ' .,- . ! '.i i JS. . ; - 7 I ; ' : 4' I '-j "" ""j , -fT ...... - '-;- " ' - f NEW YORK, Not. 10 Tanks, field gvaa, balldoxers and tally loaded tracks eaa be driven fkis loading ramp Into the Air Force's new troop and cargo transport, the Dooglas C-124 "Glebesaaster II." The clam-shell doors provide this leading hatch In the nose. of the air farce's largest predeettea transport which was built at the Douglas plant at Long Beach, Calif. Leading ef static cargo b fa cilitated by an electrically operated elevator which eaa be lowered from the center ef the cargo sec tion. (AP wlrephete front department ef defense te The Statesman.) British Plan Long Parachute Jumps LONDON -()- Do you want to know how it feels to fall ' more than 30,000 feet? Four 23-year-old British youths hope to have the answer next, year by . attempting delayed parachute Jumps from above 35,000 feet. Among them the four 1 have chalked up more than 300 training jumps from low and medium alti tudes. For their big attempt in which they plan to drop from 35, 000 feet to below 3,000 before opening their special parachutes they will use oxygen masks and carry various recording instru ments. This jump, they say, should con tribute valuable information on the medical aspects of free falls from high altitudes. It should also give them a claim to an unomciai world record for delayed drops.- U.S. Gives Venetian Blinds to Venice VENICE-INS)-The Mayor of Venice, in a brief ceremony re ceived a "special gin" irom tne United States in tribute to Marco Polo. i The gift? American-made Vene tian blinds. - Marco Polo never was sure just who first had the Idea of tilting slats so that a viewer could look outside while entirely unobserved. But six hundred and fifty years aan h hrdufht home to the ''City of Canals' a beautiful gold-encrusted gift which had magic strings. " M win theaa atnnes were Dulled. this thing opened golden pieces of wood and permmea we ugni vj come through. At another null of the cord, the narrow gold pieces came together again. As an attraction to stop passers- Dy, .wisreo na aim it in the window of their fabulous bop. ' They called it a -Venetian Blind." SPY TRIAL TO OPEN NEW YORK, Nov. lO--The spy conspiracy mai oi juqiih Coplon and her Russian ex-friend Valentin Gubitchev will start next Monday. . BRITISH SHIPS STRAFED TOKYO. Nov. lO-UPi-Chinese nationalist fighter planes today itnfMl but an Daren tlr did not damage two British ships being detained by the nationalist navy at the Yangtze river mouth. STARTS T0I10RR0W! DOUBLE Ual L ' J 30 0edothtri l1'!' TKSOIVEtAND I "I INDIANS V 4 TOMMY COOK AMNBOtAN " IASXSAIL fT ioieetr siAewo i T1AM U-ri" V J Be Driven Into New Transport Loosened Hold On Germany Big 3 Agenda PARIS, Friday, Nov. 11 -WV The foreign ministers of the Unit ed States, France and Britain an nounced today they had taken steps to support and foster the "progressive integration ; of the German people into the European community.' A! communique issued after two day of meeting here said the min isters had taken this decision the expectation that the west German government "would give " further evidence of its pacific Intentions and! Its sincere desire to associate itself with those nations devoted to the cause of democracy and justice under law and peace." The communique said the min isters had decided to give their high commissioners for western Germany "certain instructions and powers which will permit -them to achieve the aims indicated above." The communique did not say what specific powers had been given the high commissioners, but it was reliably reported earlier that the ministers had whittled out a new plan to give western Germany its freest hand since the war? British Foreign Secretary Er nest Bevin, U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson and French For eign Minister Robert Schuman had worked out details of the plan and submitted it to the foreign min isters of the Benelux nations Belgium- The Netherlands and Luxembourg. The Benelux ministers were re ported to have given It their okay. Watch GRAND OPENING OF THI NIWLY RIMODILID CRYSTAL GARDENS Very Soon O 2 Floors , 0 2 Eandt O 1 Priee- O PH. 3-3467 o MATINEE DAILY FROM 1 P. M. O FUII! DOUBLE THRILLS! M, II fiims:z2zzs i i "Ji H ' Matinee Today! Coat. 1:45 Ce-Featare TALL IN THE SADDLE Jeaa Wayme.'EUa Ralaee . Gabby Hayee Palaco jThcatro Silvrton, Or. New fleyinf I A GREAT CAST... LIVES A EREATADVUITUSE! t'l.1' "tl for Tho WSa Ex bo Flu! Color Cariconl Airaail Fox Iloviclone Him! English Munch Fried Seatveed LONDON -(INS)- Food experts in Britain are tangling, with the latest breakfast food fried .seaweed...- : ? ;. . I U.' - The new dish is already a staple breakfast item in many Welsh homes and increasing supplies are coming in from Scotland and Ire land. It is the type of seaweed that trails long, cream-colored mane like lengths on the shallow rocky pools along the coasts. Leverbread, as it is known after rocessing, is being collected in arge quantities, particularly along the coasts of the Welsh counties of Carmarthenshire .and Pembroke shire, and sent to factories in Swansea and Cardiff for distribut ion throughout Britain. .After straining, the weed is boiled and pressed. Usual method of preparing leverbread is dipping it in oatmeal and frying it. , Its phosphorous and iodine content give it a high food value accord ing to experts. Tonixkt Satarday! I Starts at ;1 T. M. Fred MeMarray Maoreea OVara Redy YaUee FATHER WAS A FULLBACK" Roy Aeaff Jaeeaellae "How la Saa Aateae" ill T.'nr -i .i. A Cent. Freea 1P. M. Nowl- Adrenhsrel (At Resale Prices) CO-FEATUREt Saleai'a Shew Bargsia! 2FIRT RUN HITS! 35c Newt Opeas :! P. M. Caarlee Starrest "Seeta ef Deata YaBey" KA1TOON EARNTVAL TOMORROW At lt:l with Ree. Shew Ends Tedoyl (TrU Jeaauae Credn "pnnnr" o Ceran Moor "A Mom About the Houm" 0: : v Airline Prohibits For Good Reason ! LONDON, (INS) Pakistanlan clothing merchant Jbrahaim La hore arrived in London by air very unhappy man. He was not allowed to smoke his beloved pipe on the journey. Smokirur'aboard the aircraft wh permissible, but when Ibrahaim Drought out his pipe both passen gers and crew sternly objected- Ibrahaim's pipe was a hookah, weighing twelve pounds, with) a laree class tobacco bowl onnnrfl by a twenty-four inch stem to an oil jar. To smoke it he draw nut thr eet of rubber tubing and two iney said it was dangerous," said Ibrahaim sadlv when ha Unit. ed at London airport. DRAMATIC HIT i COPENHAGEN-fINSl-A aroun of 'American student actors from Howard university is appearing, in a series of performances in Copen- nageo. ine ; erst production, "Mamba's Daughters," was ac claimed by Danish dramatic critics for emotional and artistic excel lence. . Teday aad Every Day Starts Today i t ef the Tear's Beat SONGSI . . . FUN! . . . and KISSES! In MGM'S JIG, NEW TECHNICOLOR MUSICAL! lli!llfflllll 'T-r- Jii ifiililili I i Ml 1 1 1 il!iV!lili!!iU.IIi( SND MAJOR HTT! She Wanted to live Dangerously ... So She Married Football Coach! It's Real and Faaay As Their Daaghter's Black Eye! It'a Wins-As Mather's CobmIsUb Technique! v kiiaR .jjii Please Attend Early Shew! Ceattaaeas Every Day! 1 s COMPANY B" BENEFIT ABQGE Friday. Nor. 11, 1949 I toll P. M. SALEII AIUIORY Glenn Woodry 'a Orchestra PUBLIC niVUED-ADIL For a Season Theatre The Heiress, Nov. -12 Fair and Warmer, Mar, 5 Peg O'My Heart, Apr. 25 With Distinguishtd Nw York Casts. Box Office at-Miller's Store, Nov. 7 Through Nov. 12 Telepkono Miller's for Reservations Sponsored by Salem 20-30 Club HOME PRODUCED MEXICO CITY-(INS)-Mexlcan Svernment and industry officials ve opened a "Made ia Mexico' buying campaign to promote pub lie. confidence in the country's goods and currency. It is hoped that mass buying of domestic: goods will lead to mass produc tion, i t . f l.The life of an adult worker bee during the active summer u about six weeks. - f Ceattaaeas V HeUday Shews , Teaaerrew Frem V P. H. v V ALAN LADO Deaaa Reed la ffiatv:-'"- a an t h Aad - Tin Holt la ' "StageceaclCKId" Year Biggest Shew Bargain! at 1:00 PJ.U yM On 1 Big Seper-Precraml V' 'V.V-' ' . V. to;?. BETTY LYNN RUDY YAUlf Ml Extra!. COLOR CARTOON C' Late Warner News m of Broadway in Salem V t. i "am z I J