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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1950)
f The- Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Monday, April 24. 1950 ! Retail Trade Bureau to Vote on Plan to Ask r Enforcement of One-Hour Parking at Meters The Salem Retail Trade bureau chants and business and professional men are robbing themselves of potential business and the" bureau intends to do something about it. The board of directors of the trade bureau will meet Tuesday noon to vote on a proposal seeking ordinance which limits auto parking posal would ask the city council to enforce tne meter regulation. "If downtown merchants and other business men and their em ployes would stop meter-feed- ' tag" parking, space for actual cus- - tomers could be increased by at least 25 per cent," said James R. Beard," bureau president. "A recent survey showed that in several downtown areas up to 40 per cent of meter parking space 1 was being used up by meter-feeders to the detriment of custom ers who were searching in vain for parking space. The average hopper has few j complaints against parking meters if he can find one available." ' Merchants and other business .firms should realize that a park ing meter is worth $10 per hour v in potential business to downtown businesses, said Beard. "On an " average," he stated, "a shopper - uses a meter only 30 minutes. Beard declared that a recent check showed that in one xi own town block IS cars were parked 11 morning without being moved. , He said the cars belonged to busi nessmen but that "retail merch ants were not the main offend' ,ers." The bureau has a list of about 178 ; regular offenders, he aid. s : ! A city ordinance regulating 1 parking at meters to one hour is on the books but has never been enforced, said Beard. It would be , necessary to add extra city police men to enforce the regulation, he noted. Funeral Rites nt Victim Tuesday HUBBARD, April 23 Funeral services for Rolla Walter Cooper, 39, killed in an auto-train accident near Molalla Saturday morning, will be held Tuesday, April 25, at 10:30 at Ringo chapel in Wood ' burn, "i Cooper died whnJie drove his ear into a freight train early Sat urday morning. He was employed at a loan. The deceased was born in Mis- inuri. Un so loin nH r.m. Oregon 38 year, ago. For the past 13 yean he has Uyed on Wood- burn route 1. He wu a mnnhor nf xne KJUgnts or Pythias of Hub-1 hard . I Hell survived by the widow. Lorena Cooper and sons, MichaeL Ronald mnA nraM aii f mk bard; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Cooper of Bend; brothers, Henry of Bend; Richard of Wil- sonville and Finl tCooper 0f MaxwelL Calit; sisters. Verdia Cooper of Rockport. Calif.: half- Charles Cooper of Mol- John rCoSTo ' Ok id a hsister Ethel i3ier, x.uiei Drotners, alia and home, and Spencer in Missouri. Lecturer from Sweden Due Hans Thunell. lecturer from Stockholm Sweden, will lecture ?n tPrle and cooperatives in aweaen at me xarmer-labor num iu. . .vK .uuiii uie rr- mers Union haU, 343 N. Commer- C1M i Representatives from organized labor and farmer organizations over ine Willamette valley will be present. The hewly-orsanized bodv is expected to select permanent name tonight Thunell h he In Amerle the Mat veer aHiiwin American w operatives. He was a member of uie puDuc reiauons acpanment oi one of the world's largest co- operative business organizations in Sweden. His visit to Salem is part of his tour of the Pacific Northwest.1 A question period will follow the Ulk. Lyle Thomas, state FU secre- tary, will speak on the Brennan pun. Late Sports Wins Slalom : NORDEN, Califs April 23 -ff- Norway's Guttorm Berge won the Silver Bell giant slalom today. sweeping down the mile-long Mt Lincoln course in 1:14.1 minutes. . The 21-year-old ace of the ski ways was a member of the Nor wegian team that won the world's championship this winter. He is an exchange student at Whitman college. Walla Walla. Wash. He was followed by Austria's Famz Gabl, who whipped down the hill in 1:14.3. The foreign- bortf skiers dominated the affair with Canada's Ernie McCullouch, m VI Inctnirtnr at Run Vallev " " - . j Idaho, and French-Canadian, Vwan I'eaArKatt in1 YVM I .STf-sMl Is place, respectively. Baseball Player Dies of Injuries NASHVTLXJC. Tenn- Anril 23 WV JZ . . r m. fiUj 8UWT IjrVCUA VUUVm. iU WW by a batted ball during a .family baseball game near here. Harrisoa pd Burtcn died in an ambulance en route to a hospital. Here Tonight Guttorm Berg believes that downtown mer- enforcement of an existing city at meters to one hour. The pro Surprised Man DENVER, Colo., April 22 Frank D. Basey nses a baby's teething ring to hasten appearance of a third set of teeth he reports are arriving; in his 85th year. He says he first felt the teeth grow ing last October and did not be lieve .it for . several months. Basey says six uppers and sev en lowers are so nearly through his gums that he is able te do some biting and chewing with them. (AP Wlrephote to The Statesman). No Survivors In Crash of G-54 in Japan By Russell Brines TOKYO, April 23 -VP)- The burned wreckage of a U.S. air Uorce transport and the scattered 1 bodies of 35 Americans who died when it arashed Friday night were 'ound today on a mountain peak 37 miles southwest of Tokyo. There wc aui f , , Best known of the civilian and victims were Frank E. RckeUe, 40, of Chicago, chief of I the occupation's foreign trade sec- tIon incf the Japanese surrender; Md Sfr?1 Jo2m.C' .Jo,ieof fr e Wis., chief of sUff of U5. naval forces in Uie Philippines. Searchers said- the C-54 plane appeared to hayehit therugged UP of .800-foot HirugaUke and 1,1 xPloiv nme about 200 down the south slope. T. m n.. It was less than 20 miles from Tachikawa airbase, its destination on a flight from the Philippines, when . it crashed during a rain storm shortly before midnight Friday. The melted wreckage was scat tered over an area of 200 to 300 yards. First LL Joseph Cooper of Salem. Ore pilot of a heucopter, said he saw what appeared to be .rf.4in l . half-mile I . r n..Kw .-. ;. sheared off and burned. widely Scattered tv. m,A Mar-h i . w v gcene 2 men of the 16th re- connaissance company of the First cavalry division, led by First Lt Danwood Reimer of Seguln, Tex., said the bodies were widely scat- tered. I Their iwwri aa nt mmtlm the state of the bodies, but Tsuto- mu Kobayashi, a Japanese police I sergeant, who wu one of the first I to arrive, said the 20 that he saw were badly burned. i vu.a v the eighth army said no attempt 10 "move uie oocues wouia oe made before Monday. It is a nine- hour climb to the site. Climaxes Search Discovery of the wreckage Sun- da.T. ftrn5fn, B",L7T,pne y, i h A i , Sa an ,Sd.t; .CnHUl; maxed an arduous air and ground earrh in Irs a nA rain h. mrtre I than 3,500 American service men and Japanese General Mac Arthur issued a statement expressing ine snocxi and sympathy of his occupation tatement Tnrln the chnclr command over "this terrible tra- gedy" to those who "were from our midst' gon of Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Erpeld- inc. 1215 N. 21st stL. was a mem per or the Philippine command aboard the air force rr.n.rww4 . V,;,), t crashed - va v aiuevvs on a Japanese mountain. He is a graduate f c,i.m vi SL5S&.5 trough the last school and served through war in the Pacific theatre of operations. He had been attached to the medical administrative staff at Ft McKlnley hospital in the Philippine Islands since 1948. CHEAPER RIDES Ind frNS Stat. kowkl didnftt 3 K! HAMMOND, I Sen- EdWin MakOWSlU. I l li. i .2SrS I Am aeaav. uivicauv anil Ufx StThS, VZJS ferer.r TiVrnmnII. Th. Sopaln rS He invited the drivers to have him arrested but each merely I rrfYffT;. lculdera and let the isenaiof nae I or a aime wnen xneir RrbaTchnle: UnL Burton, who was pitching, col lapsed after being struck by a ball batted by hia sister-in-law, Mrs. Leon Spain. t ' swas-i J ; ' V ' '"'1 A Viv 1 If fv ' ml ifeiifeL m Truman May Intervene in Rail Dispute WASHINGTON, April 23 -WV The possibility that the white house or the National (Railway) Mediation board might step in to avert the threatened walkout of firement and enginemen on four major railroads next Wednesday increased today. With the approach of the strike deadline on the Pennsylvania, New York Central, Southern, and At chison, Topeka and Santa Fee rail roads, government officials were admittedly considering several steps which might head off the walkout v The dispute over a third man on multiple unit diesel locomotives was checked to the white house last week by the mediation board when the Brotherhoods of Loco motive Firemen and Enginemen announced their strike date. Considers Moves But the board, headed by Fran cis A. O Neill, Jr., still was con sidering possible moves to per suade the union to call off the strike. The walkout is scheduled for 6 a.m. local time next Wednes day on units of those four rail roads where a strike would hurt most. One possible move by the gov ernment would be to ask the union to postpone its strike while another effort was made to mediate. The carriers already have refused ar bitration of the issue and most rail labor experts believe the union similarly would turn down ar bitration now because of the re fusal of two previous presidential fact-finding boards to . grant the union's request for another fire man on the extended locomotives. W7" V.1 -v.., I,,. ,ZZ' ffiSH,. C 1 frKrfri.ru.ld. 'sjsz"1 for in the event of a strike, President David B. Robertson of the Brotherhood of Firemen and Enginemen remained in Chicago with his policy committee, but it was learned that his offers to negotiate with the affected rail roads had failed to bring any res ponse up to today. gonenTirto take w action to avert e walkout, it must do h. MnnH n.vht otherHi The union indicated that lx the .esw a- ..i walkout The threatened atrike rfeaVwlth the Southern railway; that part of Harrisburg, Pa.; all the Atchison. xAMMir7 e--AMM Topeka and Santa Fe: the New Vnrv Pmfni wMt nf Tjnffai m v .ni thre Kvn Hivicinna 'the troit river, the big four, and the Ohio Central lines. - - Uoukhobors Threaten to Burn ViDage KRESTOVA, B. C- April 23- (CP)-Fanatic Sons of Freedom Doukhobors threatened to burn the whole villa pa nt Krestova tnnlffht .. : - . : as tney danced ana cnantea arouna the ruins of homes they had al- 9 A A A. . A. Provincial poUce arrested 14 more of the fire raiders today in an effort to stem the rising tide of relipimn hvsteria that u en. veloping the ramshackle village. Arrested were 13 women and one I man Pnllre circulated amnn the rmrfe and semi-nude demonstrators wuuui xui ue uireaienea lire purge. Twelve buildings have been de- stroyed in recent days as the rad- ical sons protested "the comlnf of a third world war." Fire is our only weapon of pro- test," some explained to police who have arrested nearly 100. The JU nd annex at Nelson, 23 mile, i"? ?J2Z..itZl " J"""1 w" WOUXnODOrS. ?cerounded uP.abpu 25 men WUM,r". aome oi inera in me I ' j ' . - " "-e"c oaiuruay, I " nine OI uie men Were Charted a"A W etaV4kel ;. itn unkwful assembly and nud- .. . . dom Tlaim h.Yfi:.: 7 r . 1 " th. rt".n7J "Z"'. aWoreter"(fh."rdlyI DomDing 2o years ago. Slayer, of V.riin I -J w w w - - wm a- a aw iirvpr eie-niuaicn uuuer, I captured. viii . rno i?CMliuWIim Jar I en. a Doukhobor. "the first th?n en, a Doukhobor. "the first thin they Should do is tell US Who was." OLD riO CINCINNATI. (INS1 -rinHn. nati Manager Luke SeweD, who ana a a . J A v est Tf01' tlented enough J? ;hold ' riing berth on the HX Alabama baseball I "V mmumuim IWKOau .during his senior wag fp TAHn1 hiMaaTf I. AV. Lvtr7 W and was i-01 aunng nil enure SaTS. PUNCH BIRTH NEW YORK. ONS) The idea I fgp e first punch drink in colon! I ,t rvYrfi. al America reportedly was Intro - duced by mg5h colonists from India. In India It was called panch, the Hindustani word five, because it is called for five imo Maroon eleven are joe vu ingredients: rum, tea, sugar, lem-1 mond. of Wayne. Pa, and Jay on and water. - Barclay, of Spring City, Pa. Imprisoned -i f ? ... f "m : ) ' VIENNA. Austria, April 23 Gl- sela. 8eU (above), 24. Berlin born blonde, was sentenced by a U. S. Uvil Affairs court In Vienna to a seven year prison term alter finding her guilty of attempted kidnaping en be half of the Russian army. Two Austrian men also were sent to prison. Miss SeU testified she had token part in plot to kid- ( nap victor Morejew to me u. . zone oi Austria ana aeuver him to Soviet of fleers. (AP Wirephoto to The Statesman). Manhunt Starts After Coiintv Jail Escape (Story also on page one) The biggest Marion county jail- break in recent years Sunday spurred a manhunt that rapidly spread through this and neigh- boring counties. Two prisoners, William Hector Lovejoy and Donald J. Barker, were recaptured by Sheriff Den- ver Youna seven hours after the break about 10:40 P.m. while they were walking along the Salem Stayton highway. Three TtheVT Donald Elmer Floodstrom, Robert Wodson Mor- Edw.rd sbr. low, 'were still at large early this morning. Every law enforcement agency in the area immediately joined in the search for the men who sawed through a cell window dur ing church services. Smuggling Mystery The method of smuggling hacfaaw toto the jail as still a rnystttj Sunday night after the capture of Barker and Lovejoy. i iMeitner would tivm man Tor m . ... ... . . . I enience on a naDiiuai enm- inal charge, said simply. "I saw an open window and had nothing I to iacp nv ffmncr u I iarr " Lovejoy said he tried to per made Barker. 21, not to go. Bar- I ker was helntf belrf unHi mninv. ment could be found for him after I he reoentw rivsi nernHui 18-months prison sentence for larceny. Very Cleanly Cut i . . - a criernfr Hnm,f t (v. v.v saw used in the break must have been almost perfect in grade since the two severed bara were verv cleanly cut before being twisted " - " J upward from the window. Every available sheriffs deoutv was patrolling dusty back roads on every side of Salem soon after the break. They were armed with sawed-off shotguns. State police patrolled main hfh ways leading from Salem and Stayton police officers established a roadblock on the Santiam high I war. A rtpnntv sheriff n).iiul i .. ' r-'j me roaa as Tar as the county line Freicht Train Checked I T A - . seen In a freight car headed south were being checked but a train stopped at Albany shortly after the break failed tn reveal the men The escapees had not eaten lnce early Sunday morning and and deputies were rherkinir nut lyinf stores and rafes on the thenrv taey may have stopped for sup- i1" " uj wu uuimneu car. Of the three men still at large eariy this morning, Floodstrom was iasl wearing a yellow "weatsnirt ana blue pin-striped pants. Sharlow wore a blue suit na Ue nd white short and Morrow was clothed in a woolen Jacket and tan trousers believed e climed out the jail window. t a o. ujcap xivucos uiui a Tar. xr In IMlSei War rlllll I mr ' . . TOKYO A leading Japan lece acreen actrec. rnll. d from a two-month trip to the lS.d J!tw: -:ime erT-nr;? . T,' wiu CAur.na Vi m w-yau- I at I . J I fans The Bette Davis of Japan." r ar la the picture, I v j 5....: f h r.t nnM.n( nrJ,t!n it Tt ha heen tentatively mmM "The 442nd Combat Team." TViA film ejeriH Vk Vvocewl vn 4Ka hmk Hiwili'i nm h Pnl Tr U cavamtn rt.ff n-it ,- Pacific Stars and Stripes. It re- 1 counts the exploit of the unit in Italy and France, wh fought some of the war", fi Nisei here it IOUini fought some of the war's fiercest ! battles. Lll w . v . . t M . mother, who was in Japan during tie war years. She now lives in ?J hCT Mn " CO-CAPTAINS - 1 EASTON, Pa, (IKS) For the 1 first time in its history, the Lafay- I ette couege lootoaii team wiu nave I two backfieid men as co-captains for next season. The co-captains of Flight Relics Discovered in East Baltic STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Man day. April 2A-(JF-A Swedish coast suard official said today a dook in English containing a list of ra dio stations and a piece or wood marked "Made in the United States' have been found in the Baltic, east of the island of Oeland. Both objects, believed to nave come from the lost U. S. n&vy privateer, will be send to Swed ish naval headquarters at Karls krona later today. Navy Capt. Axel Bjoerling said they will then be forwarded to U. S. air force headquarters at Wies baden, Germany. Oeland is an island lust off the Swedish southeast coast and about 200 miles across the Baltic from Soviet-held Latvia. The Russians charge an American plane engag ed in a gun duel with Soviet fighters over Latvia two weeks ago. Te Deliver Articles Both the book and the piece of wood were turned over to A. T. R. Loefdahl. chief of the customs? service coast guard detail at Kal mr. He said he would take them personally to Karlskrona before noon today. Loefdahl said he got the objects from farmer Tore Anderson who had found the book Sunday morn ing on the shore near his home in southern Oeland. He said the wooden piece had been picked up by one of Anderson s relatives Saturday not far from where the book was found. The book, Loefdahl said, con tained 128 pages, was 5.9 inches by 9.8 inches in size, and had both covers missing. The text is in I English and contains a detailed list of radio stations and their call I signals, "apparently from all over I the world," he added, Maps, Tables I The book contains maps 'and taoies, and there were written an- notations on some pages at the names of Baltic radio stations like Swinemuende in Germany and uucuppen in sweaen. The wooden suck. Loefdahl re ported, was just over a yard long. 3.5 inches wide and 1.6 inches thick. It had not been painted or varnished, he said. On the stick was black letter ing which looked as though it had been stamped on the wood. Part of the text was washed out by water, but Loefdahl said he could distinguish some of it. Illegible Words There was one line reading "M ILL. ..33..." and two black- square. each coaimng " f iftri. Between ihem Printed -l- . lined squares each containing two was I Y sf t I kA - .... i luai iui buuitc " "i4" wmv see. ast other aquares were unreaoaoie I vtcav ujc icucis uur. I A"" thebottom wasthe phrase wniiea aiates. I Yesterday Swedish custom i official, corroborated the previous account ot a state pob'ceman that Pked up m the Baltic "J b3Laleiman' ' looked "J " had been hit by bullets." The vellow ruhher life nfi mo. me yciiow ruDDer life raft was e eco picked up in waters off Swedh c1oa!t mc.f he Baltic 1 " Russians Wage Baltic Purge in THght'Area By Richard Kaslschke BERLIN, April 23 The ""if m. .wa"1 PKe m ine 5, VC,UD"CS w proiecx coasta I 7" , 1 iz"1 in the General area wnere they claim an Amen pIan? .u"1, V 5ake PnowaPh. the official American - 1 "wspaper nere reporxea toaay. Neue Zeitune. published bv the Information services division of i vvmmiuim , ui- fice lts information came irDm aiuc reiugees in Sweden. The newspaper quoted them as saying the Russians feared a fifth column of Baltic nationalists along the strategic coastline where Rus- sia is reported to have submarine pens and rocket-launching sites, The United State, has charged Russia with shooting down an un armed U. S. Navy Privateer and its crew of 10 over the open Bal tic sea, the Privateer disappeared April 8 while on a flight to Co penhagen from Weisbaden. , The Russians protested that they knew nothing about the Privateer, but said their fighters answered fire from an American B-29 fly ing fortress which they encoun tered on April 8 over Lepaya (Li bau), Latvia, one of the 'Baltic "pUbllCS. The United States said the Pri vateers was the only American plane in the Baltic area that day and none of its B-29 superfort resses is missing. . The 20-30 Club of Salem Present the Comedy Hit nt 0' My Heart Professional New York Cast Salem High School Tues. 8 p.m. April 25 Reserve Seats $1.73 Unreeatva! $1 Foc.4nforma1ioii Ph. 2-4479 the j Japan Selects Kimono-Clad Beauty Queen TOKYO. April 23 -UP- The Japanese have picked a national beauty queen and intend to send her to the United States on a good will tour some time this summer. The first "Mis Janan" is Tu- iko Yamamoto of Kvoto. chosen I in a nationwide newspaper con test The Japanese ran it a bit dif ferently from There were no C.Ttf- ing suits and evening gowns. In stead the 11 contestants in the finals displayed colorful kimonos and were questioned by the Judges on their intelligence and personality. Vital statistics also were Iimit- ed. The sponsors would-disclose oniy mai buss japan was a ieeu o mcnes lau, weignea lua pounas i and had a 33-inch bust GI Confesses Murder to Girl Friend FLINT. Mich.. April 23 -65VA handsome air force private broke aown in ironi oi nis sweeuiean Carthy's charges, and to Senators tonight and again confessed heTydings (D-Md) ' and McMahon killed Beatrice Dickerson, 17, last) n-Md). members of the subcom- summer, sheriffs officers report- ed. Earlier ln the day, ivt. Kennetn Nesbitt, 22, repudiated a state- ment he made last night he killed uie girl uevu mix miuiuu ci imo ma car. men nc ucmnuucu to see nis giri inena, wai ramcia aimmons, zi, siauonea at Selfridge air force base, Miss Simmons was summoned. Deputy Sheriff -Jack Turner said Nesbitt broke into tears and pas sionately unbraced the girl. Then the officer, said, Nesbitt told Miss Simmons he had killed the theater cashier here. Prosecutor Leon A. Seidel said he would authorize a first degree murder warrant tomorrow for Nesbitt. Sheriffs officers said Nesbitt, after talking with Miss Simmons, made a new statement amplifying the repudiated state- ment he made last night. Denied Everything Previously, Nesbitt had ue- clared he made the statement last night only because he . was tired after. 12 hours of questioning. Of- ficers said he was defiant today and denied everything before he met Miss Simmons. After her meeting with Nesbitt, Miss Simmons told newsmen I love him. I love him. Ill wait for him and I know now it will be for a long time. Miss Simmons was told that Nesbitt has a wife, his second, still living and there was no record of a divorce. "If that's the case we'll have to wait until that's cleared up," she said. She was wearing a class ring h calrf NehHt crave her a an engagement ring. Parents la Oregon , MU. Simmon. .a! Mechttt fc1 written to her parents in Eugene ,nActvtf v1,01 hr "y Ore, asking permission for mar- "lilthj busi- riaee. She enlisted in the women's ness. .and dded hP that he air force 14 months ago. She met Nesbitt at Selfridge field last Jan uary. Officers said they would make a i .t t 4 v. v-um point out where he threw the gun used in killing Miss Dickern. State police searched today along k- .n f ""If:,"!.! ZJ aa aus vi uav atajuia ivi aj uiii The body of Miss Dickerson was found under a bush on the Rich mond road near her home here last July 12. State police said that Nesbitt In the repudiated statement said he shot the girl in the head because she gave him he brushoff when he asked her to get into his car. Nesbitt was stationed at Self ridge air force base at the time of his arrest last Friday. He is held without charge for questioning in the killing. FERRY RADAR CHESTER. Pa., (INS) Fulton's "Claremonf up the Hudson will have nothing on Chester s "Cape May" up the Delaware. For cruis ing down the river soon, the "Cape May" will be the Delaware's first radar-quided ferry. Westinghouse corporation which made the an- ouncement. will build the vessel. Now Shewing Open 8:45 Qaeectti ; tout? 1 ueui aw-Toar.s-tjUTi SECOND FEATURE "TENSION" Aedrey Tetter. Richard Basehart Acheson Terms Solon's Attack 'Mad, Vicious' K Mirahi T. ArTAwtmlttl WASHINGTON. April 23 - JPy - Secretary of State Acheson charg- CAnsfnr MrthT. I MAlOJ V mr-mwrm V ,;! ua VxTi -ISSSJ r Jple or outside help to dear the - if 'V'Snl "ch ot its mammoth "invaders I ripstrov the confidence of people .u : n t-v..,, ln t1 foxTin ofice nlin their governmeni in one pi uw critical Hours oi wis nauon s nis- tory" Acheson's reply to the Wlscon- The whales were washed up on sin republican without naming an unusually high tide early yes him was made -st night before terday. Today's tide brousht in the American Society of News- Tarer Editors in an off-the-rec- oni speech. The state department todav made nubile part of what nc nad to say. McCarthy was present and heard Acheson's remarks. He told a reporter today he was "very much disappointed" and he con tinued: "The speech was disturbing in that it indicates he goes along 100 per cent with the Truman-Tyd- incs-McMahon line that the real criminals are s those who try to I expose and get rid of communists and perverts in the state department-" He referred to President Tru- man who has brushed aside Mc- mittee which has been investigat- I in them. McCarthy charges that the de- partment is harboring communists sn(j fellow travelers. Acheson i said nis metnoa was uxe calling i out au the fire apparatus in town m hopes of finding a fire, but not knowing whether there is one. President Truman is expected to hurl an answer to the attack on the department in a nationwide broadcast tomorrow night (NBC 7 pjn. Pacific standard time) be fore the Federal Bar association. an organization mainly of law yers in government service. Acheson discussed the right and wrong way of trying to detect subversives in the state depart- ment. The riant war. he said, is through the loyalty program set Up under General George C. Marshall, former secretary. The wrnnf wav " Arhenn aalri "i tn smear everybody's renuta- 9 - - j l , tion; to make charges on the basis that, if one is not right, you try to find another one you hope will .1!.L. a A. A- j J I stick; to try to destroy the con fidence of the people in their for eign office and in their govern ment in one of the most critical hours of this nation's history to do all of those things and to make it absolutely certain as a result that under no circumstances could you ever possibly find a spy in I the whole place. "It reminds me more." Acheson said, "of that horrible episode in . . . . - i I Camden, NJT which happened no1 80 lon ownen a madman came out on the street in the morning with his revolver. With P purpos and no Pln as he 4wk4ed down "if treeta, he JUSt ShOt People ... would never SP" ot " "Kin- POPULATION Xfr ",?',Z'1"e PPU" vi uib wnnea oiaies ai ine R0', '"JXH doWe what 'L.?' fen' lurvf according to the statisticians ot the MetropoUtan Life Insurance company. RIGHT NOW The World's GREATEST LOVE STORY EXTRA TREATS Cartee - Brevity - News ENDS TONIGHT! When Willie Cemea March! nr Hosee The Heiress'' NFW TOMOMOWI T fitmlbrrrt ill l!CJMAWUaI TrrrrnOTn nr. 2ND HITS . Jfcfct tOX ROK RJBatXI WSm Extra-Cart - Wanaer News 1 - i 1100 Whales Wash Ashore, Die on Beach KIRKWALL, Orkney Islands. April 23-(P-Nearly 100 bottle nosed whales washed ashore in the Bay of Holland at Stronsay th,ei' uy ?- "J nuen iooxea neip- The Orkney county council's 1My on. island's 70 inhabitants had turned out to watch the death throes and speculate on the enormity of the health problem involved. barely three feet of water, not enough to refloat their hun bulks or arouse them from their Workshop Airs Solutions to Race Problems Solutions to racial discrimina tion problems in America and over the world were discussed Sunday at. the end of two-day Race Relations Workshop here. Hideo Hashimoto, faculty mem- Der at Lewis and Clark college spoke at the morning conference at Leslie Methodist , church. He emphasized that the teachings of Jesus eases racial tension. He outlined the wnrV nf rj.. dhi in India nointinff to lt as a modern illustration of easing ra- ciai tension without the use of violence. Main speaker of the day was Dorothy Nyland, New York City, student secretary in the Methodist board of missions. She explained the mam points of solution In race relations problems as (1) get the facts, (2) lace the truth (don't try to run away irom the problem) and (3) action (not words) is what counts, finally. WIFE WORK NEW YORK. (INS) At the lat. est count. 8.000 ooo wiv nearly nne.fmi rTV a? tall tnerrlal women have Jobs outside the home in the U. S.. the American Magazine reports. Half of these I wnrlrfna' rioe are mnntk. . -mmm " " w uivuuii Last Times Tenite! Open 7 - Start at Desk Ronald Reagan. Patricia Neal Richard Todd -HASTY HEART Ray Roaect Dal Evana Trecoler Bells Of CereaaeV (H) (3 CS Ifo si Wu-., ,j 'it- Mat. DaOy freaa 1 P. M NOW SCRIAMINOI oi tust Ml ssaTtfl4fls aVJarfVlsVi a T' rwimwea smasfrBa ZASUP1TTS Added: Ethel Smitk Henry King Orch. Opea 8:48 P. M. NOW SHOWING! CO FEATURE! Barbara SUawyek Henry Feada THE LADY EVE New! Opes :ii T M. WITliaaa Pewetl "Mr. Peabedy T Gregory Peek nriiwwtanr r ... tfcW4atf L nil l. ii eiTl 1