The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 28, 1950, Page 6, Image 6

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    t The Sfrrtr"Tw, Solem, Ow
Old Murder
Laid to Soviet
Secret Police
SEATTLE, Sept 37 Sovied
secret police killed the wile 01 an
Aberdeen, Wash., labor leader 10
years ago, ' an' admitted ex-com-
I zmmist has testified. Her murder
! was never solved.
Paul Crouch. Miami. FUusald
Laura Law was slain because she
intended ta go with her story to
place it before the newspapers and
the public the. Inside ..story of
communist party activities In the
state of Washington,"
Attorneys disclosed today that
Crouch had given this testimony
fining deportation hearings for 10
eattle aliens, underway since Au
gust. Crouch appeared as an expert
witness for. the immigration and
naturalization service. T
Laura Law was found bludgeon
ed and stabbed to death at her
home Jan. 5, 1940. No one was
-ever charged with the slaying.
She4 was Cm wife o Dick Law,
a former leader of the Grays Har-
' bar International Woodworkers of
America (CIO), at Aberdeen, one
of the largest timber centers on
the west coast. -; .
She was murdered . . . Coinci
dent with the return to this coun
try of George Mink, the chief exe
cutor for the foreign division of
the OGPU Crouch testified. The
Seattle office of the federal bureau
of investigation Identified Mink as
"comintem agent" who disap
peared about' 1942 or 1943.
The Laura Law case popped into
h hMrinf when Crouch, a former
district organizer for the party.
tesunea war ae aeaaea to mv
the party in 1942 but was "afraid
I might suffer the same fate as
Laura Law."
"Who was Laura Law?" a de
fense attorney asked.
"She was a member of the com
munist party in the state of Wash
ington who was killed by Soviet
aerret nolice. according to avail
able evidence," Crouch said. He
added that "full details will he
brought out by proper agencies at
the proper time."
In Aberdeen, Paul O. Manley,
special prosecutor who investigat
ed the pas in 1940. said the mur
der 'could have been Red-inspir
ed '
"That was one of the theories
advanced following the murder,"
: said Manley. There were some
facts which tended to substantiate
such a theory. However, there was
nothing definite as to who actually
killed Laura Law or by whose or
der the murder was committed."
Aberdeen Police Chief A. M.
Gallagher said he would welcome
any information which would
"lead to actively reopening the
- case." .-" ' ,i
Revenue
U.S. Forests
Sets Record
PORTLAND, Sept 27-C-Rev-enue
from 19 national forests in
Oregon and Washington reached
a record high of $13,732,174 in the
last fiscal year, the regional forest
servce office reported today.
Income was more than double
operation and protection costs for
the region, the office announced.
- Forests in the two states were
largely responsible for a gain of
eight per cent for , the entire
country to a new high of $33,594,
614. the forest service said.
Major income came from timber
sales with a net gain of $1,500,000
over the previous year. Grazing
receipts totaled $245,391, land use
revenue $7882 and water power
rirhts rental $6,969.
Counties will receive one-fourth
of the revenue in lieu of taxes.
distributed in proportion to the
national forest land in each.
Willamette National forest top
ped, the nation with $2,355,407.
-Olympic forest was second with
$1,606,942. Others in the million
dollar bracket were Gilford Pin
chot, Umpqua and Ochoco.
Nf ROOM FOR LOOT
BALTIMORE, Sept 27 A
spokesman for the Chesapeake and
Potomac Telephone company said
Tuesday there is little chance that
any of its counting house girls will
set away with quarters in their
brassieres. The local , company
handles Its quarters in 54-pound
bags. . i :
HIGHER POTENCY B-12
LOIVER COST TO V0U
YitZsT.Li B-12 zrJ FcUs
1
V
ThnredoT. September 28. 1S5Q
Guard Reserve Headquarters Formed
Maj. Gen. Harry C Brumbaugh, left,
company of the 7th Oregon Infantry reserve Tuesday night following activlatlon ceremonies. The IS
Salem area men are the nucleus of the Oregon national guard reserve which is being formed to take
ever the emergency duties el the regular guard, in the event it Is called to active duty. The three ef-
ficers in front are, from left, CeL Armin Burger, regimental commander; CoL E. T.. 81ms, and MaJ.
. L. Freeman. (Statesman photo.)
General Claims
All National
Guard to Serve
PORTLAND, Sept. 27 -ffV-Maryland's
adjutant general said
today he believed all national
guard divisions in the country
would ultimately be called into
federal service.
Four units of the 23 infantry and
So armored divisions already
ve been called up.
In any case, Maj. Gen. Milton A.
Reckord, the adjutant general, said
national guardsmen can expect in
tensified training at home with
units brought to full strength.
One reason all guard units
couldn't be called into service at
once was lack of equipment. Gen
eral Reckord, ex-president of the
National Guard association and
now chairman of its legislative
committee, said.
The national guard, he added, is
In the best condition in its history.
Oregon, Reckord said, violated
a federal law when it activated the
Oregon .national guard reserve as
a security force to replace nation
al troops when called to federal
duty. Several other ; states did
likewise.
But congress rectified the mat
ter before adjournment by re-
enacting the state guard law,
Reckord said.
He was her conferring with
Majv Gen. Thomas E. Rilea, Ore
gon .adjutant general. They visited
Gov. Douglas McKay in Salem
this, afternoon and returned here
tonight for a conference with top
guard- commanders of the state.
Open House at
(Vet Hospitals
Recommended
Holding open house at veterans'
administration hospitals at reg
ular intervals has been recom
mended to the Veterans Adminis
tration by Salem chapter 6, Dis
abled American veterans.
Citizens of this area would be
encouraged to visit lonely disabled
veterans if such a policy were
adopted, a spokesman for the Sal
em chapter said Wednesday. Many
hospitalized vets have not receiv
ed a visitor this year, he added.
The public also would become
better acquainted with th- rehabil
itation program for disfled vet
erans by such a program, accord
ing to the Salem groups
Liimb
erman s
Widow Asks
Will Changed
ALBANY, Sept 27-Pr-The
widow of lumberman Aaron In
gram started legal action today in
probate court to - substitute terms
of a missing will for one on file
here.
At stake is the division of In-
Acid a OHE tepsuh
u
iiltD
am
to Ccztet Fati&id,
"ilerves'9 and nutritional
Anemia ,; .' .
HI gift Potency per Copsvle ,
Means lower Cost per Day
TtU sktstmisiSl tUI IspMaisf IN-$11tl 4
I i ..!''".
w
. fern
receives his first efflclal salate from headquarters and headquarters
gram's $400,000 estate. The Leb
anon businessman was killed July
30 when his private plane crashed
at Toledo.
His widow, Ema Ingram, claims
will was on her husband's per
son when the plane crashed into
the Yaquina river. She said it was
lost with some of Ingram's cloth
ing when the body and airplane
were recovered.
The will on file, dated Dec 8,
1948, divides the estate between
the widow, two children, and Os
car Ingram, father of the deceased.
Mrs. Ingram has named two
witnesses to verify terms of the
will she claims Is missing. This
will, she said, gives herself half the
estate and divides the other half
between the children. The father
would be excluded.
Maryland Men Held
After Checks Bounce
George Louis BranzelL 24, Bal
timore, iiul, was held at the city
jail on a vagrancy charge Wednes
day night for questioning concern
ing bogus checks, city police -reported.
BranzeH was arrested by city
detectives as lie left m downtown
store, . . -..-.
L
Tiailan Gilisri
-1 . . .
Applknco D:pl.
wmm
i
SP Freight
Traffic Hits
Record High
PORTLAND, Sept. 27 In spite
of a country-wide shortage of
freight cars, Southern Pacific has
established an all-time high in the
first eight months of 1950 for the
movement of freight shipments to
and from Oregon.
This fact, indicating Oregon's
expanding economy, was made
public in Portland today by W.
W. Hale, vice president in charge
of the railroad's system freight
traffic
Up to September 1, 150,915
loaded cars had been shipped from
Oregon points on the .railroad's
Portland division, he said, where
as less than 50,000 loaded cars
were hauled into the territory.
Because of the disparity be
tween Oregon's loaded inbound
and outbound traffic, Hale said,
Southern Pacific has brought close
to 100,000 empty freight cars onto
the Portland division in 1950 in
order to give Oregon shippers
their full share of available
equipment.
...... ..v-,.- I I;
.. vv.-.. . ...
3k
HOME FREEZER
UlfniDnir rampj
.11 Ml vMlllM
- , v -
. 1 I
:TCc I'.'
TUi k tb freezer yoa need! Mors than 11 cu. ft of atce
S spsce. Handy wirt baskets. Automatis tempcratnrs
eontrol, nut-proof aluminum liner, erea a special non
rtfi-fjti iltil compartment for wrapping material and freea
feg soppliet. Antomatic faitarior lihL Locking latch. .
Cents In today and bt us thowfyou
Oilier Ilcdels As
AvfMorfzexf DeaW
GEHEnALt
HOME FREEZERS
0PEII FI1IDAYS TIL 9 P. II.
'Brassiere
Brigade' Faces
Arrest Again
MIAMI. Fla Sept 27 -UPh Jusl
tice as elastic as the items in
which they carried their loot snap
ped back today on members of
Miami's "brassiere brigade."
Legal haymakers came from two
quarters - and not the silver kind I
the women orally admitted taking
out of the telephone company
counting room stuffed in their un
derclothes. From the office of the county
solicitor came orders to rearrest
eight of them, including six
women and the husbands of two
of them. The " telephone company
signed complaints. -
From Circuit Judge George E.
Holt, who had freed them all yes
terday while the phone company
hesitated over signing a complaint.
came an order Impounding all
money, automobiles and all other
property of 11 persons allegedly
Involved In the ase. This ' In
cluded : $10,000 now In police
hands.
' In the oral confessions, later re
pudiated and never signed, the
girls admitted that some of the
estimated $160,000 they toted out
of the corrrpany in their brassieres
went for automobiles, payments
on houses and for bonds. .
a rM.. Cniit4M mrttt
al V. Zarownr said the re-arrests
were made nossible after the
Southern Bell Telephone and Tele
graph company audited long dis
tance toll records flown here from
the Jacksonville office and deter
mined "definite shortages during
definite months."
SEATTLE. Sept 27 -flrV The
Pacific Telephone and Telegraph
company's Seattle office isnt wor
ried about any of its coin counters
1 75 Cords Per Day
Small Saw Logs
! Diameter 6" to 18" Ungth 8'2"
BURKLAMD LUMBER CO.
Turner, Oregon " Phone Turner 1125
InnGdioIc Delivery
This big, new O-B. Home Freezer holds up to 389
pounds of lsorted Irozsn foods up to 12 months. .
Now vou can buy seasonal foods at sales prices. You can
buy fresh and eommercialrf frozea foods in quantity
and at quantity prices. You can freeze foods from your i
own garden. ' . . . , -hi
If s Just like having your own store right in your kitchen.
You can eat the delicious foods you want whenever yoa
want them. r T'
No morelast-mmote, bad-weather shopping. Makes meal
planninf easy.
:
how this O-fl Freezer
l- 1 -
Lon As $233X5
) ELECTRIC
Gary Ziegler Sent to
Childless Private Home
OREGON CTTY OreSept 27-
(AVThe youngster who shot his
mother at his father's farm arlier
this month was made, a ward of
the court today. Judge D. A. Long
of Portland said the boy would be
placed in a childless private
home, far from the scene of the
shooting. .
The boy, Gary Ziegler, 9, fatal
ly wounded Mrs. Mathilde Zieg
ler Lair as she prepared to take
Gary and a sister to a new home.
Scio Residents
Protest Bus
Route Change
ALBANY, Sept 27 HJP)- Aban
donment of Greyhound bus service
between Halsey and Jefferson was
protested here today by Scio res
idents. A spokesman appeared be
fore a state .utilities commission
hearing on the bus line's petition.
W. H. Eggers, Greyhound's
Portland district manager, said the
firm is losing 26 cents a mile every
time its bus makes the east Linn
county run. He said revenue from
Scio last year totaled only $682.75.
William Nickanen, Bend, man
ager for Pacific Trailways serv
ing the area, said his firm also had
losses In the area. He supported
Greyhound's abandonment.
Gardiner Ewing of West . Scio
said the Greyhound service was
needed in the growing area. No
delegations appeared from Leb
anon, Sweet Home. Jefferson and
Halsey, also served ty tne urey
hound line. -
walking out with a brassiere full
of change as per MlomL
The counters don't wear bras
sieres.
ONLY
pays for Itself!
349 Ccnri
Donnslairs
Mother Held
AfterSl
UI 5 tliildr
en
FOSSIL. Ore-' &tt 27-MVA
VOunr mother t In ettstrtA-w nt
Wheeler county authorities here
in the slaying of her three chil
dren over a period of 21 months.
Mrs. Juanita Louise Carr, 23, the
mother, admitted that she smoth
ered two or them and dropped the
other, on his head, Dist. Atty.
George Dukek said today.
Sheriff Malcolm Keys and state
police officers arrested Mrs. Carr
State St. . . . I - Capiiol
j marEiets
ORIGINATORS OF LOW PRICES
HEBE THEY ARE
SALEM'S GREATEST MEAT
WORD STOP IN AND SEE
PORK BOAST
Fresh Picnic
urn COTS
To Roast ,
PODS STEM
Lean . ,
LOIII COOPS
Centers
side pons
Fresh
EASTEWI OHEGOII
Processing. Which Enables Us
sale Prices.
DEEF ROAST
Arm Cots
POT ROAST
Mecrtr ; -j
ROUIID STEM
I Prime Cuts
BEEF CUBES
Boneless . , T
ROLLED ROAST
LB.
PTirCTT nTHTTPTI PnitrP Tastes Better. Tne Same
fUbdU glbUbU CUU11
Meats. Ours Have Thai Sweet.
pianc haiis
Shoulders '
SIDE DAOII
Piece
joul Bacon
LB. : 1.
BACON SQUARES
LB.
about maims :t,?z? SLsrs sss
Amoant Of O Id-Fashioned Wiener. Due Te The High Cost
Of Natural Casings They Are
.
SIUIILESS WIEIIERS
LB. . " " --.
V7EIIERS
Old-Fashloned .
EffllG BOLOGIIA
LB.
LIVER SAUSAGE
IB. , - .
OUB CAPITOL STHLtT MABXET IS OPEN UNTIL 7 VM.
FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS UNTIL 9 PAL
CLOSED S0IID&YS
' Salem's Meat Merchant for 35 Years .
HARRY M. LEVY Owner , :
at her home in Mitchell, 45 miles
south of here, where her husband,
Qearge, is a sawmill worker.
, keys and the state police began
an, investigation after the death
September IS of Patricia, a S-year- 1
old idaughter whose body was tak-
eh to the coroner's office at Prine
ville in Crook county.
Dukek said Mrs. Carr admitted
under questioning she had smoth
ered the little girl in bed.
. A son, Gary, 2 years old, also'
was. smothered last January 27,
Dukek said the woman told Mm,'
Another son, Donald, about - S
months bid, was dropped' on his
head Jan. 15, 1949, the. district at
torney quoted Mrs. Czrr as saying.
These two also 'Were taken to
the coroner's office at Prineville.
She could Bot explain her ac
tions, Dukek added.
A
VALUES. DONT TAKE OUR
FOR YOURSELF.
J3.
-LB.
Bl
p We Purchase - Tne
Livestock De Our
Te Retail At Practically Whole
.LB.
.LB.
IB.
Gees Far Berne Cored
Tempting Flavor. .
-LB.
-LB.
A Bit Higher In Price.
.....
-LB.
43
g0
0
9 mummZ
51 C2)
V t
1 .