The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 27, 1949, Page 6, Image 6

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    f Tho Statesman! Salons - Ortgon-t Sunday. Not. 27, 1 $4fr
U.S. Protests i
Sbfe of CI
By Ruks Sentry
Salem Has No OWigatipri in j j
Fire Protection Outside of I
" Gty Limits, Mayor Declares
z The city of Salem "does not guarantee or assure lire protection
. to an property located anywhere outside of the city limits," Mayor R.
L. Efstrom has informed Mrs, Donald K. Griffith, secretary of the
Liberty-Salem Heights fire district committee. j
The question was .raised by Griffith in a series of questions to the
wiavor Dertainin to a vote scheduled Tuesday, December 13, as to
whether a new fire mstnci snouia
be formed iu an eight-mile-square
area south and southeast
The mayor said the city's at
titude toward fire protection out
side of its incorporated limits
was set forth in its resolution of
last December 27. The resolution
provided that in cases wherein
equipment could be spared' from
the city, and wherein special pro
tection was approved in advance
. i . M.tnAi1 trAnArtv turn
I ers who had deposited a minimum
j of $100 would receive response
f from a fire alarm. The deposit
Y would be payable yearly with no
rebate. J
The charge to residents with
such contracts would be :$50 per
hour or fraction thereof for each
piece of fire equipment used, the
iDO thus paying ior one nour jot
two pieces of eequipment If more
than that equipment-hours were
needed, an additional charge
would be made on the $50-an-hour
basis.
Mayor Elfstrom wrote that
there was no truth in reports
that city fire trucks would re
spond to rural areas in cases
wherein residents had $50 riders
on their Insurance policies to
residents had a $50 deposit In the
bank. He also said the city was
not required to send trucks out
side the city limits up to three
miles, as had been rumored.
Mayor Cfstrom, who said the
. city would be "willing to discuss"
. the oroblem of mutual aid- in
event a UDerxy-saiem neignu
district were formed, declared
that:
"There have been Isolated cases
where the city llre-figlitlng
equipment, has. In the absenle of
any arrangements therefor, re
sponded to calls to private prerrii
A lses beyond the city limits. Un
der tne terms oi ine resolution
such calles are now against
-the declared policy of the coun
cil, although the fire chief has
some discretion -in. the 'matter
where be considers the outside
fire to be of a nature or at a lo
cation that it may menace prop
erty within the city."
The proposed fire district ex
tends roughly from the south city
limits on the' southeast to Pringle
rood on highway 99-E, and south
to the ridge above Croisan creek.
rrance,
lradelSloi
i
BERLIN, Nov. 26, -(JPh MaJ.
Gen. Maxwells D. Taylor protested
personally to jSoviet Commandant
Maj. Gen. Alexander Kotikov to
day against the fatal shooting by a
Soviet sentry lot Staff Sgt. John
E. Staff of Ramsey, 111. Taylor said
it was "senseless brutality,
The U.S. commandant demanded
punishment of 'the1 sentry land as
surances that: Russian sentries in
the future undertake "responsible
use of their weapons. ;i
U.S. army authorities Said Sgt.
Staff, of the U.S.3air forces, Was
killed when he, two other air force
men and a German girl inadver
tently crossed; into the Soviet zone
while out driving last night Dis
covering the ! mistake when they
came to an obscure Soviet check
point, the driver turned about and
sped for the center of Berlin, re
fusing to heed the 'sentry's signs to
proceed on into the Soviet zone.
The sentry ! riddled the back of
the car with Several shots and one
bullet hit the sergeant in the head.
He died in the British royal air
force hospital at Gatow airfield.
U. S. authorities said the ; air
force men were In uniform and
were driving a plainly marked of
ficial air force car;
Taylor's note said the Ameri
cans' action 14 turning back toward
the British sector was peaceable.
"It Is difficult to understand the
senseless brutality of a sentry who
would fire upon a member Of the
armed forces! of i friendly nation
under such circumstances," he said.
"I trust that; you will appreciate
the seriousness with which ; the
United States authorities view this
act" i :
vsm
'Spy' Dispute
' i
By Ormonde Godfrey
WARSAW, Pbland, Nov. U-VP)
Poland rounded up a group of
Frenchmen and France deported
nine more Poles today in the eye-for-an-eye
struggle set off by , the
arrest of a French consular attache
in Poland last week.
Each nation, accuses citizens of
the other of spying. !
Diplomatic circles here view the
chain reaction with some alarm.
They say the affair might easily
get out of hand and snap diploma
tic relations between Paris and
Warsaw.
The Polish foreign ministry , an
nounced the arrest of Antoine
Boitte, French vice consul in War
saw, in reprisal for the French ar
rest Thursday of Joseph Czeczer
binski, the Polish vice consul at
Lille. Police picked up Boitte at
4 ajn. 4
Other Arrests Noted
The French embassy told of oth
er arrests. An embassy stenog
rapner, &opnie Muczynsica, and a
consular stenographer, Elda Pen-
none-cneimonsKa, were among
those held. Both are French citi
zens. A Polish stenographer of the
French institute, Helene Kurczaba,
also was arrested. Reports to the
embassy Indicated the a rest of four
Frenchmen in other cities.
French ambassador Jean Baelen
personally intervened last night
and held,IIciy,p$lke,$eak-(
ing anotner em o&ssj , worker, jmsa
Helen LoiseL She escaped down a
back stair of her . apartment 'and
was escorted to the embassy after
Baelen, summoned j by telephone,
stopped the raiders with a demand
to see their warrant. They had
none.
Arrest el Rebtneaa
Tension between ; Poland and
France started with -the arrest of
Andre Robineau, a French consul
ate attache at Szczecin (Stettin),
on espionage charges last week.
(French Foreign Minister Robert
Schuman formally charged Satur
day that Poland has broken the
United Nations charter in her
treatment of arrested Frenchmen,
particularly Robineau. He said in
a note to the Polish ambassador
that the accused Poles "will be
assured of all those rights guar
anteed In a democratic country,"
even though such rights are not
assured "French now detained in
Poland."
(The French expulsion of nine
Poles brings to 28 the number de
ported in a week in France s in'
vestigation of espionage and sabo
tage. Vice Consul Czeczerbihski is
held in a Paris prison on espionage
charges. Also TIeld is M. Szuster.
president of avPolish patriotic or
ganization at Lille known as the
PPO.) .
SCOUTS WIN AWARDS
WILLAMINA Nancy Reed,
Sharon Lee Spangler. Doona Rain
both and Darlene Rydell received
their Girl Scout pins Monday at
the regular meeting of the Girl
Scout troop 2. Bonnie King and
Zonna Boyer gave reports of their
design, traffic signal and good
grooming badges.
West German
Leaders Feud;
Rocks Nation
By George Boaltwoed
BONN. Germany. Nov. 2B-WVA.
bitter personal feud between Chan
cellor Konrad Adenauer and social
democratic leader Kurt Schumach
er over the new allied-German
agreement is rocking the west Ger
man republic.
Schumacher was barred from
the next 20 days' sittings of parlia
mentwhich means he will be out
until about next March for call
ing Adenauer "chancellor of the
allies' in debate. i
! A full scale crisis was averted
only the social democrats' decision
not to boycott parliament in pro
test. The party is the second larg
est In west Germany. j
My exclusion strongly endan
gers further collaboration in this
house," said Schumacher, one
armed, one-legged chief of the op
position toXAdenauers coalition
government. The social democra
tic party has not yet decided how
it will react, but it will react"
Order by Council
The exclusion order was Issued
by the council of elders, a rules
committee made up of representa
tives of all parties, which held the
insulted Adenauer by implying the
chancellor was a puppet of the
western powers.
"The most serious Insult imagin
able" was Adenauer's view. The
SHot from Ground
Hits Airline Pilot
MANILA, Sunday,. Nov. 27-(JP)
Cathay Pacific Airways today said
one or its U. S. pilots was wound
ed by a bullet while flying j
plane near Mandalay in Burma
Thursday. The airways said the
pilot, James Harper, (home town
unavailable) was hospitalized.
. (Presumably he was a victim of
the civil warfare in Burma.) .
Nelson Re-Elected
By College Public
Relations Officers
SPOKANE. Nov. 26 -(vP)- iyle
M. Nelson of Eugene, Oregon, was
elected president of the northwest
district of the American College
Public Relations association today.
Nelson is public relations di
rector for the University of Ore
gon at Eugene.
Approximately 40 public rela
tions officials from Pacific north
west colleges and universities at
tended the j two-day conference
here. The meet ended today! with
a business session and panel dis
cussion. ! !;:?
Next year's conference will be
held in Portland, Ore- it was de
cided, i s
THIS IS WHAT
THEY WANT!
i
Yes, your parents, rela
tives, best friends want a
photograph of you this
Christmas! A photograph
they can keep among
their precious mementos
in the years to come.
Make your appointment
tomorrow!,
Make your gift one sure to be welcomed!
Make your gift, one sure to be welcomedl
Christian democratic leader, 74,
told newsmen he would have ac
cepted an apolcjgy from Schuma
cher, but none! was forthcoming.
Boot Mark Debate !
The parliament voted down, in
a tumultuous session that ended at
dawn, a social democratic motion
challenging the jiuthority of Aden
auer to sign the agreement Boos,
catcalls and banging of desk tops
marked the debate.
The western j allied high com
missioners announced the German
republic is to work for a year in
the framework.! of its newly ex
panded powers! without further
revisions. j
The negotiations with Adenauer
are complete and the 10-pdlnt pact
they signed yesterday is not to be
regarded as "a (stepping stone for
further demands," the representa
tives of the United States, Britain
and France told a news conference.
Doct
ors Save
One Eye for
Family of 3
British Fire
Red Suspect
LONDON. Nov. 26 -JP)- A Brit
ish foreum office official has been
suspended because he is believed
to be a communist.
A foreign office spokesman said
tonight neither (details nor the of
ficial's name could be given.
The government began more
than a year ago a purge of com
munists from ! posts where they
had access to lute secrets.
Reliable sources said the man
suspended by jthe foreign office
is a civil servant in the execu
tive class, who has held his Job
for several, years.
PORTLAND, Nov. 26-WVMary
Hope Hodgdon, 12. got a belated
Thanksgiving present today her
vision. j
The youngster who since child
hood has been the eyes of her
blind parents learned today that
her ! one remaining eye probably
will be saved.
The eye, threatened by the same
rare ailment which cost her the
sight of the other, was examined
by physicians today, 10 days af
ter an operation.
The retina, which had been
breaking loose, was fastening
down again as needle-pricks heal
ed. !"The operation appears to be
a very j great success," reported
physicians at the Elks eye clinic
of the University of Oregon medical-
school.
Sandbags which have been
around Mary Hope's head to avoid
a, sudden movement were remov
ed. She can safely move her head
a little more, now.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hodgdon
promptly began making plans to
celebrate. They expect to bring
Mary Hope home from the hos
pital in about a week. j
But she still won't get to read
the 1,000 letters and packages
which have been sent her from
throughout the country. !
"We're saving them until she f
gets home," said her father. "But f,
friends are going to read them ;
to her. We're not going to run any f.
risk of straining that eye." . j I;
. ; j
FADLING RE-ELECTED $
PORTLAND, Nov. MiiPWames i!
E. Fadling was reelected to a third s;
term as president of the CIO Inter- l
national Woodworkers of America j:
in unionwide mail ballot returns '
announced today. i f;
Conscientious, Dignified
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TeL 3-3672
Oregon Bldg.
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