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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1950)
Juvenile Delinquent Has Own Tha Statesman. Salm, Oregon. Monday. April 24. 13S0 S ' ' ' i TTT7T7T CSity Mews DBirfieffs Ideas on How to Curb Grime -Flying Nursery9 n U.S. . NIXON GETS SUB DUTY ! ' Joe H. Nixon, seaman, USN, on of Mr. and Mrs. Hillis G. Cooper, 520 N. High st, recently vu graduated from the enlisted course at the New London, Conn., submarine 4 school. He has been assigned to submarine squadron 8. Road oiling ph. 2-4151 eves. 3-5769 Johns Man vllle ' shingles 'applied by Mathia Bros., 164 S. Com'l Free estimates Pb 34641 Marshall's, Corners serve fine foods. Special dinners $1. i , - OWEN YOUNG PROMOTED I PvtOwen A. Young, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Young, Salem route 2, recently was promoted to private first class while serving with the 1st cavalry ; division in Tokyo, Japan. Fresh killed nice clean heni tur keys, special this week 35c lbi Why not put 3 or 4 in your locker? C. S. Orwig, 4375 Silverton Road, Ph. 26128.1 ! I v . 1 ' . '1 I ' Rummage sale, Isaac Walton, lots. of stood clothing. 339 Court it. Wed. & Thurs. , Advertising Specialties for open ings, anniversaries, good will, etc. Everything from A-Ash trays to Y-Yard Sticks. Or-Ad-Co., C. of , C; 147 N. Liberty, Phone 2-0731, Through State Group tours through the Ore gon, state i hospital will be con ducted Wednesday and Friday in observance of national Mental Health week. ;! 1 ! The tours are scheduled from 10 a.m. until noon and from 2 to 4 p.m. In addition, Fairview home will be open to visitors daily from 1:30 to 4 p.m. this week. i National Mental Health "week, April 23-29, will be observed in Oregon with the slogan: "You Can't Buy Mental Health You Can Build It. Purpose of the week is to show the public that mental illness, in most cases, is both preventable and curable. Speakers will emphasize that a home atmosphere of secuity and emotional stability is vital in safe guarding mental health of children and that Oregon's suicide rate, among the highest per capita in the nation, could be reduced If victims of depressive mental con ditions would seek aid in avails-able institutions. iVS Plea for Bases In Dardanelles ISTANBUL, Turkey, April 23 (AVRussia'a -renewed campaign for bases in the Dardanelles was viewed im Turkey' official press today as fa call to the Turkish people to be more awake and united." ; . '.. i Turkey'! position was made clear in a front page editorial in Ulus, organ of the ruling people's party, and' distributed by the of ficial Anatolian agency, obvious-i ly reflecting the official attitude. The editorial referred sarcas tically to an article In Red Fleet, organ of the Soviet navy, which raised again Russia's old demand for Joint control of the straits. Turkey has said her last word on this question," the editorial said. "The Monreux convention (under which Turkey controls the straits) takes particular view of Russia's security and guarantees 'this security. . H "Turkey U . a most sincere guardian of straits security be cause this security Is at the re me ' time the foundation of Turkey's wn security and independence tion of CB Company Slated Friday . The annual inspection of Sal em's organized CB company 13-9 will: be conducted Friday i at the naval and marine corps reserve training center. ! ; ' Inspecting officers will include Capt F. S. HalL USN, Comdr. J. A. Eastwood, USN, and Lt. Comdr. J. K. Jackson, CECR. USNR. all from 13th naval district headquarters in Seattle, j The CB unit is! now up to its tyll complement of five officers and 40 enlisted men. Iturbi Makes Crash Landing WYE MILLS, Md, April 23hVP) -A private plane carryint Pianist Jos Iturbi to a Baltimore concert engagement lost its way in heavy overcast and made an emergency landing in a cornfield here today aner running out of fuel. ? No one was hurt. Iturbi, his sis ter. Madam Amparo Iturbi, and his : secretary, Marian Seabury, went to Baltimore by car. The aircraft was flown there later by their pilot. The afternoon concert was postponed until TuescUy. Group Hospital Due soviet tiene Inspect FIVE BOYS TO SPEAK Five Salem high school students will speak Tuesday noon at the Salem Kiwanis club meeting in the Marion hotel. Gus Moore, Sa lem YMCA general secretary, will be toastmaster of the program which will explain the Hi Y youth legislature here April 28 and 29. Hearing Aid users, fresh batteries for all makes just arrived, new 1850 Beltone, 26 smaller, 16 lighter, free demonstration. James Taft & Associates,! 228 Oregon Bldg. ph. 2-4491. Advertising and Gift Calendars, over a thousand to choose from. Now on display at Or-Ad-Co, C. of C, 147 N. Liberty, Phone 2-0731. Approval of Foreign Aid Bill Predicted By Jack Bell WASHINpTON, April 23-6P)- The administration counted heav ily today on communism's new pressures to speed senate approv al of a $3,732,000,000 foreign aid bill despite strong efforts to chop it. With administration lieutenants predicting approval of the . full amount, Senator Tydings (D-Md) said bluntly that the recent loss of an unarmed American plane charged to a Russian attack, spy trials behind the Iron Curtain, and "demonstrations in Berlin' have stiffened congress' attitude. In a weekly broadcast (WBAL) to Maryland voters, Tydings said: "The effect of ail these increas ing incidents is not calculated to reduce expenditures for defense or for means of collateral defense, such as strengthening the demo cratic countries and offering fur ther resistance to communism." He added that the joint chiefs of staff will be asked to tell con gress soon whether they think the army, navy and air force should have $500,000,000 more for planes and other equipment than the January budget allowed, as Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower suggested recently. Tydings forecast "warm de bate" on proposals to cut the $3, 100,000,000 portion of the bill for the third year's operations of the European Recovery program. In this connection, Senator Hickenlooper (R-Iowa) told re porters he will offer in the senate tomorrow an amendment, reject ed by the senate foreign relations committee, to cut $600,000,000 off this total. One of J the most important reasons for such a reduction is that deficit financing in our own government is on the increase, ac cording to the latest reports, Hickenlooper said, adding: We've just got to stop spend ing more than we take in." 2,000 Scouts To Participate In Circus Here More than 2,000 Cub and Boy Scouts from every part of Marion, Polk and Linn counties will take part in the annual Cascade area council Boy Scout circus, May 6 at Waters park. ' Committeemen from the Salem Lions club have been preparing for several months for the event which will feature scout activities, as well as 1 clowns, wild animals and other phases of circus atmos phere. Proceeds from the i circus will b used to rebuild iportions of Camp Pioneer, Boy Scout camp in the Cascade mountains . which was damaged by high mountain snows. Buildings in the camp orig inally were sponsored by the Lions club.! - A parade at 3-45 p.m. on May. 8 through downtown Salem will start the circus day festivities. Public Records MUNICIPAL COURT Peter Lj Erickson, 845 Vista ave charged with driving while intoxicated, held in lieu of $250 bail. ." Paul Kenton Golver, Salem route 2, charged with reckless driving, paid $50 bail. Lome W, Sheker, 340 Union St., charged with driving while in toxicated, held in lieu of $250 bail. Howard T. Coome, 410 S. Elma ave., charged with reckless driv ing, liquor involved, held in lieu of $150 bail. George Cleveland Lynch, Salem route 9, charged with reckless driving, paid $45 bail. FOt MSimED SAVINGS SEE Rmi - Federal Savings firs! Current Dividend 2Vj st Federal Savings end Loan Ass'n. 141 S Libert ..!.'-:.. I it.-.. iy (P. ftSL 1 ALAMEDA, Califs April 23 Wives and children of Navy officers and men stationed on Midway Island walk up the dock of Alameda (Calif) Naval Air Station after their arrival aboard the Navy's Hawaiian Mars from Honolulu. The. 19 wives and 33 children were the last remaining dependents on the tiny Pacific island which the Navy is closing for economy reasons. (AP Wire photo to The States man). Portland Man To Sail Ketch To Australia PORTLAND, Ore., April 23 -(-Adventurous Allen Edmunds, 30-year-old cook, plans to sail alone to Australia in a 30-foot ketch. He wants to hoist sails June 1 and hopes to sight Aus tralia 18 months afterward, may be later. . "I don't want to feel hurried," he said. "If I see an island I like, I'll stop there. That's, why I'm going alone. Anyone else would want to hurry." His charts route him south to Los Angeles, then to Honolulu for a several month stop, then on to Tahiti. His boat, equipped with an auxiliary motor, will be load ed with 245 gallons of water, 40 o) 1 , 5iUi mm WMi Its lew Arst cost, tow upkeep and high resale value Ford is the new standard of value. And here's certified proof of Ford's great gae economy! In the recent Mobagas Grand Canyon economy Run, effkioty supervised by AAA, e '50 Ford "Six" with Overdrive wan the economy championslMp of its doss she ft the low-price Weld. VALLEY MOTOR- COMPANY 375 Center Street - - . .. , t"- -j - - - :k ' 'r ' " '7-' 1 HgjiWI. ,u MJ -BkgMggplMSWnBSMHvMWi.-' i - : &J cases of canned food, and other staples. He has included bolts of cloth for trading in the Pacific islands. Edmunds has never made a long voyage before, but he is being tutored by Harold Oakes, a high school instructor who twice sail ed from Honolulu to Portland in the same ketch. Grenades Explode In Commie Meet QUIMPER. France. April 23- (iP)-Twenty-three persons were injured three of them seriously, last night when two grenades ex ploded at a communist meeting Police said the blasts occurred when - anti-communists invaded the hall. Communist leaders were ; ex horting their followers to prevent the shipment of arms to French troops in Indochina for use against the Vietminh rebels BIG L ECONOMY mCt&lGlii ' : 1 3 fui-stae By John Staff Writer. SuDerintendent James Lamb revealed that enrollment at his Wh- i . .... 'i ! . . More than 180 boys are connnea, lor nearly every type of crime. ' This juvenile delinquency problem was hashed over recently in Salem by a statehouse filled with PTA representatives, Boy ana urn Scout leaders. 4-H club leaders i and others who work with young people. . i "There is a lack or irainea per sonnel to guide youth," they de cided. Last week R. L. Murphy, new chief of the Portland FBI district, told Salem Chamber of Commerce that "home and environment are mainly responsible for the making of criminals." City police officers recently re turned from statewide confer ences on i juvenile delinquency problems, looking insN, These efforts analyze juvenile delinquency from the outside looking in. However, there is no one who realizes the problems of juvenile delinquency quite like the delin quent himself. His outlook was obtained re cently in a talk with a 20-year-old youth who is serving a term in Marion county jail on a bad check charge. For reference, call him "BilL" Picked Up for Burglary Bill was picked up for burglary when he was 9 years old, in the south. His FBI record discloses sentences in training schools and prisons in many states from Geor gia to Oregon. "The trouble starts with comic books, movies, parents, bad com pany and with publicity by news papers that spread crime all over page one and radio stations with crime programs," Bill said. "You can learn a lot when you're right in there with them in jail that you'd never. get any oth er way," he said. "Take the movies," Bill pointed out. "You watch the criminal live high until he's caught. Then they usually imply he made 'only one little slip.' "You figure you won't make that one little slip. You see how they lived before they got it. You try it yourself," he continued. "And you end up making a slip yourself--usually a different one, but it always gets you." Bill next hit the parents. "Some of them figure ways to cheat on income tax. You get the idea that it's all right to cheat and try it a different way. And you pay for it" Bill also thinks too many kids "have things handed to them on a silver platter." "They ought to get out and HWe is the rugged chassis of the '50 Ford. H low, box-section frame with five cress members gives xtro strength and rigidity. The advanced ngi iweringi design provides low center of gravity and unusual stability . . two of the many reasons! lor Ford's luxurious big car comfort and roodobftty. And for power you have a choice ot two great eoan my nginw...thelOO-h.p.V-8 or the 95-h.D. "Six, H. White j The Statesman of Woodburn Boys school recently institution had; reached an air-time educators, ministers,t psychiatrists, work for i everything I because when that allowance stops, you'll try to get it the easy way." He also blamed the educational system for not teaching trades, "something you can make a hv ing at" . ' j ' ' Delinquents to Criminals And how do they turn from juvenile delinquents into criml nals? Bill has an idea on that one, too. i "Training1 schools should sepa rate every age group. A tough kid 13 years old gets in with some' one 17 and follows him around like a puppy. He gets bigger and better ideas. It's a hero worship process. When he leaves, he has new angles. How about the training school program aimed to give youth a chance to chose his traded "Too many schools i snove a trade down; your throat" New Idea Advanced ! Bill also advanced a itather re volutionary idea. "Why not let ex-convicts, those who really have proved they are going straight, help in running boys' schools, he suggested. "To heck with their i records they're there to help the kids, not to impress i them with their edu cation. They'll know ithe ropes be cause they've been inside them. And they'll know the types they'll be dealing with. "And if ;he's a loser who has learned something by it, maybe he can show them that they 11 al ways end up losing," he added. Oil-Laden Rail Cars Derailed, Blaze 7 Hours POPLARV1LLE, Miss., April 23 -P-Eighteen cars of a southern railway freight train jumped the track today and 15 of them all loaded with crude oil burst into flames, 1 The fire raged nearly seven hours.; It was put outNwith equip ment speeded from New Orleans. Damage was estimated at $20,- 000. About 200 feet of track was torn Up. i No one was badly hurt but a conductor and a flagman were shaken upland required first aid. You'H say this '50 Ford k outstanding lor style. And the New York Fashion Academy agrees wholhortedly with you. For the second yoar in a row, th Academy has awarded Ford Its Gold Medal a "Fashion Car of the Year." D) Phone 3-31471 WE WILL IIEVEn DE We "GLADLY" Heel All j : Advertised Prices , Every Day in the Week! I Owl Soda Fountcdn Special! COMPLETE! Roast young torn turkey, dretaing. whipped potatoes, fresh regetables. crcmberry sauce, hot toll and butter. r j ? jHL and a cup of piping xS" hot fresh coffee ' FLASHO DEPENDABLE JUKgDSTullO PtLQDD ; Big 4 ez. tin Woodbury 50c Sizi PRINCE Beg. 15c Pocket Tin mm '-nnnm O ' Jonba Flour Sack CHOCOLATE COVERED Full Pound Box pan r-l CUf THIS COUPON p. a TIDE UiSnHIG FOUDEQ P 31i:SSiiSe : 18 Q D a a a o a Store Hours A. Capitol Chopping ONLY OWL BCD . j '' t " s v J 7e ALBERT ' a ? O fi a a a a M. rjnI 10 F. M. Irecy Day j2 III lllh vfiii i; Cesfrr CcpQol d Ctsitf ETTTJI FD3 LEl (o)c I),