- .. 1 'Tha Slcrteanian; "SolernV Oreory Thursday, ' Tun -IT 1950 Seniors lomas At Silverton ; i SILVERTON, May 31 Seventy eight seniors received their dip lomas at the 42nd annual com? mencement" exercises liri the Sil vcrton high school here tonight,' with Dr. James. Millar tjf-Portland delivering the address, i Of the group,' Marjorie Jean' Leonard was valedictorian and Howard Allen Klopfenstein the : salutatorian. Honor students an nounced, who have" maintained a grade average of two or better, were Martha Storruste, Janice and ; Joyce' Herigstad Jaunita Myers, Dewey t McBride , Harold Watts, Kathryn Loe. Barbara Blake, Jean ne 1 Gottenberg, Leila Miles, Lor raine Kohlmeier, ( lone Howard, Patricia Megonifele, Jacqualyn Johnson, Bonnie Anderson . , and 1 Bobert Johnson. j. ' 1 'f . - ' t-i ... .v ner of the Business and Froression a I Woman's club award of $25-to an outstanding senior girl. f - students were xepi m suspense on the three honor plaques, with . announcement made during the commencement program.!; ! ! On the American Legion plaque, donated in 1935 by the Delbert , Reeves fost no. i, goes vie i name of the student showing tht "great est improvement in leadership, scholarship and citizenship during the high school careef. The flame ' announced for. the 1350 honor,was Jaunita Uvtrs. ' ' --, The names of Janice Herigstad I and Robert Johnson will be) en craved on the TXT. plaqvle,! sel ected on a four-fold basis: Citi zenship, character, leadership ! and scholarship; -Winner ol the place on the Athletic plaque, aWaded each year to the best all-around thtete Of the year, was Jack Kol- jln. This plaque was lirsi presem- :d by Harold Davis in 1942. . The Rev. Arthur Charles Bates iof the First Christian cnurcn gave the invocation and the Rev. 5, L. "Almlie. the benediction; ' I Musicx was iurmsnea- oy ue chnnl hand under the direction: of J. P. Dyrud. Two special numbers Included a brass quartet composed of Lloyd Agan, Donald Branen berg, Richard Naegeli and Robert 'Mickey, Kenneth Hahn and Ken neth Naegeli. ' " Three scholarships were award ed to Martha Storruste, for the umversiiv oi cregtin; jaiute ijic- rigstad, for Oregon State college, and Patricia Megonigle, for -Oregon July Invasioi Of Formosa ' - -c- -. ... sP eculation . TAIPEI, Formosa, May 31 fP)- Natiorialist Formosa specuiatea today that a communist 'amphib ious assault across the 100-rhile ,wiae- rprmosa siraiv way vic " br mid-fJuly. - Chiang Kai-shek, in conference with forelgrj newsmen luesaay, aaid ait invasion by then waslpos- , aible, but not probable. He main tained the nationalists are not afraid of the test. . - ! (The Chinese communist . radio - announced a campaign , to - organize-: all seamen of east China ' T - .i 1 :i tH support me peopica, uuciuuu (red) army in crossing the i sea iand liberating Taiwan"," or for- ; (A broadcast heard by the As sociated Press at. Sah Francisco . aaid the plan wasdopted May 28 at a conference drthe 'east China ,eommittee of the China Seamen's . union." The communists are as sembling hundreds of small craft along the bays and inlets that notch China's east coast. These frequently are attacked by na- . tionalist warplanes and warships.) 1 Bread Cut by Strike MEDFORD, May 3U -OP)- The - supply of bread in several Oregon and California cities was cut short today by a strikV. of. two big wholesale bakeries. t ' ; The bakeries Fluhrer's and Beck's distribute bread to Med- - ford, Klamath Falls, Lakeview, .Asbland, Grants Pass In Oregon, -..to Yreka, Weed, and Dunsmuir In , California,, as well as to inter Mnediate pouits. i j The AFL Bakers and Confect loners union struck Beck s ba: kery here, and Fluhrer's bakeries nd -at Klamath Falls In a marid for a . 10-cent-hourly 'increase. her de pay DAY to Elect New Officers J Officers will be elected tqiklght for "Salem chapter 6, Disabled American 'Veterans; at an. 8 pjn. meeting In the Salem Woman's lub, 480 N. Cottage st I In addition, chapter delegates will be named to represent Salem Jt the state convention In Eugene un 13-ie. "r N h . Special guests Invited to to night's meeting include SUte Com tnander Dorr Quayle, SUU Adjut ant David R. King, Past State Com tnanders Llls Dailey and Erland Sundell and National Service Of ficers Gerald 8. Kelsey and James jiuason. I . Ooats that are produclnf a gl- i w v, itumw y UMJ -WIM N Prof mora profitable if they! can : be milked at eight hour Intervals WPJ Supply Why White House Project 4 if New skeletons for the closets, of Ushed by the American Iron and for In restoring the Executive jacks win raise floor beams into ward to conform to-jthe taper of Negro Menial Patient Taken Without Fight NAPA, Calif., -May 3M)-Ed-mund E. Whitfield, 25, huge negro who escaped from the state hos pital here, surrendered meekly late today after two officers accosted him. . The six-foot-four athlete escap ed yesterday from the mental in stitution. ' Deputy Sheriffs Paul Hartman and Tim Linehan saw him this afternoon, walking along the coun ty road, five miles east of Napa. They drove alongside and open ed a tfoor: . ' s "You'd better get in,; Ed," one of the officers said. The one-time junior varsity half- pacK at USC climbed into the au tomobile. . U-The 180-pound athlete, husband or a white woman, previously has escaped three times from Camaril lo state hospital in Ventura county.- - v A month ago, after his last es cape from . Camarillo, he led offi cers in a two-hour chase across the Richardson Bay mudflats in Southern Marin county. J Actress Saved By (Chauffeur DAWSONVILLE. Ga Mav 31 -i'PHActress Susan Hayward, on location in North Georgia for film Movies Better HURRY MUST "BARRACADE" Color by Technicolor And "HARBOR OF MISSING MEN TOMORROW! lot ffi avenge ' - t ; :.l WANDA witk fnaat tocpk lederer-Cdlieia Extra! -BREVITY "Calling AS Animals" COLOR CARTOON Warner N '"''''"'Wl"! v J pfesents j IflflB : ' 1 y ..-rr w , IWi I I ' I I ' v'r 7 ' -'u n the White noose This cptaway drawing prepared by Steelways, pub Steel Institute, shows what some Mansion. 1. Anchor bars tie steel columns to the outer stone walls. 2. position on concrete piers. 3. Exterior columns will,, be staggered ut stone walls on upper floors. (AP Newsfeatures.) ing of "I'd Climb the Highest Mountain," was saved from almost certain death today by an alert chauffer. The. red-haired movie star, en joying a day away from the cam eras, lost her footing while trying to take a snap shot of the 729-foot Amicalola Falls near here. She was' caflght by William Gray, 20th Century Fox studio chauffeur, who 'almost went over the water falls with her. "- Holiday Death Toll Record By The Associated j Press Five hundred seventy-tone Amer icans died violently in accidents during the four-day Memorial day holiday weekend. The death toll included 347 traf fic victims. This was a new record for the Memorial day period, the national safety council said. The former record for the holiday was set last year when 253- traffic deaths were counted during a threeday iteriod. In Sdduion to the 347 traffic fatalities, drownings took 96 lives and 128 persons were killed in miscellaneous accidents. The death toll by states, listed by traffic, drowning and miscel laneous causes, included: Idaho 4-0-1; Oregon 6-0-5 and Washing ton 9-6-5. Good fertility of turkey eggs is closely associated with the pro per method of rotating the toms during the breeding season. . Than Ever! END TONIGHT! 2 Great Paramount Hits! American soldier who hit wartime bet ray at I 2nd Ace Paramoant Bit r- ' J So Cosily j f , r of the $5,000,000 Is belns spent ormer WSC ead Victim of Heart Attack PULLMAN, Wash., May 31 -(P) Dr. Ernest O. Holland, who re tired in 19451 after serving for 30 years as president of Washington State college, died last night at the age of 76. ' He succumbed to a heart ail ment at the Westover, Mass. air force hospital.'- Dr. Holland died as he had lived on a mission of educa tion. Though in ill health, he ac cepted an army assignment last month' to aid in the denazification program in Austria. He was flown back to this "country ten days ago after suffering a heart attack. Funeral services have not been completed but it is expected his body will be returned here for buriaL " - His beloved WSC dedicated a -i PHONE MA Serv LOW COST . . QUICK hp Top (rambler Crime Counts ' NEW YORK, May 31H)-A rackets-probing New York county grand jury today charged bigtime gambler Frank' Erickson with bookmaking and conspiracy. It returned a 60-couht informa tion against the 54-year-old Erick son who years ago tossed aside a waiter's apron- to become in time admitted boss of a multi-million dollar gambling empire. Conviction on the multi-count charge carries a maximum penalty of a $500 fine and a year in jail on each count. The jury's-findings climaxed an investigation begun by the district attorney's office in April, 1948 as an outgrowth of an inquiry into an attempt to fox a professional foot-1 ball game. . , 1 Bit by bit, the investigation slowly pieced?! together evidence linking Erickson to his far-flung gambling operations. Then last May 1, District Attorney Frank S. Hogan's raiders swooped down on the gambler's Park avenue office and seized a truckload of docu ments. . 1 The documents. Over the protests of Erickson's counsel, were sub mitted to thegrand jury. HOME FURNISHINGS CORVALLIS -(INS)- Oregon farmers' wives saved an estimated $12,877 last' year by 'making and repairing their own home furnish ings under an Oregon state college extension program. The handy women re-upholstered 390 chairs alone. - ? All brooders operate most ef ficiently and successfully in build ings that are properly insulated and ventilated. new library on the campus in his honor Monday. Dr. Wilson Compton, who suc ceeded Dr. i Holland on January 1, 1946, said the entire commun ity at Washington State college was shocked to hear that its pres ident emeritus was dead. Sixty STRIPS BARE THE FACTS OF LIFE STATE - ice for our subscribers WE IF YOU subscribe to The Oregon Statesman you have a clas sified advertising charge ac count. Phone in your classified ad . mail it, it will receive the same prompt attention that it m would if you brought it YOUR ADS VISIT OUR CLASSIFIED DEPT. RESULTS if' - " ' il n ' ' V.i i v - 1 1 jJ -1 aaaaaaaaawialilif iiaaaaaaaaaaaaifc iYHnMi.mittmumSmitt This yard -long 17 H pound lobster was snared in the nets of a fishing drarrer off ' Newport, R. L, recently, Larry Shea holds a one-pound lobster, about the usual shore-dinner slie, for com parison. (AP Wlrcphoto to the Statesman.) Oak Ridge Workers Return to Projects OAK RIDGE, Ten., May 31 JP) -Ending a week-long strike which union leaders called "unauthorized and illegal," AFL workers return ed to their jpbs today on vital atomic construction projects. Hundreds of a force of 4,500 workmen, who either struck them selves or honored picket lines of an affiliated union, streamed back to their jobs on the morning shift Work was resumed on projects costing $250,000,000. . V0ME1I0NLY2W-MEII9P.M Hi mam trmx men school 4te C0I1IIIG! N V IT in. CHARGE fire Matron Site Selected For Statesman News Service ' LIBERTY, May 31 A Liberty Salem i Heights firehouse will be built near South 12st street junc tion just off highway 99-E, directors-of the rural fire district de cided Wednesday night. The directors accepted an offer by Elbert Dickson, proprietor of Dickson's market, to donate prop erty for the station. -' A $6,583 budget also was. ap proved at the meeting which about 20 persons attended at Liberty halL. ' v : . j Delivery of a new $15,000 fire truck : for the recently-organized j district is slated for late Septem ber. It is a Mack 500-gallon, three stage pumper with midship pumps. The truck has a 164 horse-power motor and a 2 -ton chassis. . Plans and specifications for a fire station also were submitted Wednesday night by Homer Hea ton,; resident on Skyline road, but no action was taken. SMUTS HOLDS OWN PRETORIA, Union of South Africa, May 31-(P)-Field Marshal Jan Christian Smuts' doctors re ported today the 80-year-old ex prime minister is maintaining good progress in his bout with pneumonia. " "BLACK MAGIC" and . "SIDE STREET' ' ' TOMORROW! "A TICKET TO ! TOMAHAWK" ( "EAST SIDE, WEST SIDE" UftnvrgtitJ q Now' Showing Open 6:45 With Rod Cameron, Marie Windsor SECOND FEATURE "HENRY THE RAINMAKER" Y O U Liberty UUD cm YOU STATESMAN classified aas are easy to place, low in cost and they produce results quick ly. Use them , to sell the things you no longer use. Read them to buy -the things you need. It's a thrifty habit. MAIL THEM Phone 2-2441 , Office Located at ' So. Com'I. & Ferry St. o became a state in 1803. r W- L i NOW SHOWING Open t - Starts at FREE PONY RIDES Larry Parks ' t Evelyn Keyes Wlllard Parker "RENEGADES" Randolph Scott Glenn Ford DESPERADOES" Mat. Daily from 1 P- M. NOWI ROARING ADVENTURE! . THRILL CO-HIT! f . , Don Barry Kobert Lowery THE DALTON GANG" OPENS 6:45 P.M. NOWI THBULSl D UPROARIOUS CO-HIT 1 4 R OR 25 m !2H y I TJ W-SW I us teaa ox u hour lnUrvalx.