t Th Statesman. Salem. Oregon. Friday. November 24. 19S0 ' . x... Propaganda Purposes Behind Release, Freed Soldiers Believe Faith WiU'Keep Lor id icith ls, r roers Told Holiday Churchn . By Barbara Brines and Dm Whitehead -AN AMERICAN HOSPITAL, Korea. Nov. 22 -(Delayed)- -JD-Twenty-seven U. S. war prisoners 'freed by the Chinese communists aid today they believed the. reds released them for propaganda . purposes. ; ; Bathed, fed and relaxed after their ordeal, the prisoners talked about their adventure and its ' strange and happy conclusion. . The group, freed near allied Ikies Tuesday night, said the reds treated them well. Some were Wounded but none was in serious condition. " " " ' ' - " Handshakes and a last-minute lecture on' "American imperial Ism- preceded their . liberation, the captives said. Then they were permitted to walk through the jnoonlight to the safety oi their own lines. ' : : V The soldiers themselves said Jhey believed their release was a propaganda move. Their red cap tors told them to assure their fel low Americans that the Chinese communists did not want war. The reds, they said, blamed the Korea a fighting on "American Imperialists," and called Presi dent Truman, Gen. MacArthur and Secretary of State Dean Acheson no good capitalists.0. "I had to agree with them as long as I was a prisoner," said one infantryman with a grin, "but that was only because I wanted to get home." The hospital commandant pro hibited use of any of the prisoner's names. A sergeant told this story: The Chinese attacked from the north on Oct. 30, at 12:30 ajn. the sergeant, in a ditch, was wat ching the fight when he heard someone yell, "my God, here they are." "I looked around and the first thing I saw was a long bayonet on the end of a rifle." he said. "I fired once and missed. I fell to the ground, and the red soldier shot me in the, right side. Soon a kid fell on top me and the Chinese soldiers shot him twice. "The kid saved my life. I don't know who he was. He died while lying on top of me, and I played dead. Then it seemed the whole communist line ran over me." . The reds withdrew, however, when the Americans counterat tacked. The wounded crawled into a dugout, the sergeant said, but the Chinese got so close that they were tossing grenades into It. ; Two days later the sergeant's group surrendered. "All of us who could stand were lined up against an embankment and a red captain told us not to be afraid, "the sergeant said." He said they would not hurt us and would take care of us." The Americans were permitted to keep their cigarettes, watches and other personal possessions. They were marched to Pyok- tong. a village near the Man- churian border. The captives re ceived daily lectures on commun ism and the ills of capitalism. They got medical care from two American doctors, also prisoners. Three days ago the reds select ed 2? captives, fed them a good meal of rice, barley meal and vegetables and loaded them into trucks. They traveled for - two nights, hiding during daylight. The third night the trucks were halted and the Americans were told to walk to their own lines.: With two sergeants and a cor poral in the lead, the group start ed down the road. It was a lonely march. Most of them still feared an ambush. Then the advance guard saw a cigarette glow in the dark. A voice shouted: i "Haiti Who goes there?" "God, but I was glad to hear that voice," said the corporal. The men identified themselves as war prisoners, and got a hearty welcome from the outpost of the first cavalry divisions seventh regiment. By WlnaUn H. Taylor Church Editor, The SUtesman Because "the Lord has been with us until now, and we have faith to believe he will continue to be with us" was the reason the Pilgrims expressed thanks and modern America should. So said the Rev. James I Wilson, pastor or Jason Lee A&etnoaisi church, at Salem's union Thanksgiving service Thursday. A capacity crowd of more than BOO persons attended tnt program in Court Street Christian church, sponsored by Salem Ministerial association. Wilson said some will not give thanks because of worry and fear, though there never has been a time free from worry. Then, "no matter how much! we have, we may fail to enjoy it and to appre ciate it." 1 Some, he added, are never quite free to enjoy their blessings, al though some in dire circumstances have shown their appreciation. In this connection he pointed out that a large share of the world s population will never know enough to eat. Compared to the modern uni ted States, the Pilgrims of New England had little to be thankful for, Wilson declared. To them the forests were a barrier and a thing to be feared, rather than a valu able natural resource; they were afraid of more trouble with the Indians: their harvest of that year was adequate but they had no sur pluses to burn or dump at sea. A saiem academy giris' mo comprising Wava Darby, Aletha Storey-and Janice Olsen sang, as did John Schmidt Organist was Mrs. John Schmidt. Ushers were Hi-Y club members. The offering will go to Church World Service for its united overseas relief. Other ministers participating were the Kev. waiter rredencx. the Rev. Eugene Stowe. the Rev, A. G. Yates, the Rev. Louis E. White, the Rev. Richard J Abrams.- You nq Fossil Hunter Finds Bones of Sloth PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 23-WVA U-year-ld boy who prefers inmHnv fossils tn niacin baseball has found the bones of a huge an imal that roamed South Jersey 100,000 years ago, the Academy of Natural Sciences disclosed today. . The boy is James Ruble, of Moorestown, N. J, a suburban com munity 10 miles away across the Delaware river. . animal whose remains he i The animal whose remains fsund was a ground sloth, says Dr, Horace G. Richards, the acade my's associate curator of geology and paleontology. ; ; : Richards said the discovery, of parts of the backbone, is, the first froof this great bear-like animal, 5 feet VJong, once roamed the South Jersey (mafcshes. Similar finds have been previously report ed - - one of them by Thomas Jef ferson - - in ! what is now - West Virginia and in Pennsylvania. . . I The ground sloth long since be came extinct. It's closest surviv ing relative is the curious animal called a sloth now found in South America and best known for its IS If I "TOY SHOP" V I Meet at Quite VjN I terry's. Ticket t ul Utility I flil I - ONLY Nweaaker I A fl VS Bv7 ym tickets I ' il SAtarsay for eboic I TJ3cl aeaU. P a I a r , I tax). Start Dec. I YL 1 thra It. 1 I I ' C ' 1 aitety. Mattaees at V VJ-' 2:3 ,mt-. Dee. 3. M V " X Soju. Dec 31. Moa. - - ' X New Year! Say J p, w j As. Jaa. L tmm AH eeata rescrreS - Mattaecs f 1 a4 ereBiaei. ReaMMber I 1 kz efftce epea for erne say I nly, latarSay, NeTeaaker I ; 0Uefcfryt Ctrair I --: Pharmacy, lit Ceart I . 1 Street, Salem, Ores oa. : I j crl osK23 fa trick of hanging upside down from tree limb. Richards told this story of how Jim discovered the fossil bones in excavation for the New Jer sey turnpike no far from his home: Jim has often visited the exca vations in the hopes of turning up some fossil find. Some time ago he discovered a cluster of shells embedded in green clay. Research convinced him they dated back some 50,000,000 years. He wrote Dr. Richards a letter asking him to come and take a look. Richards replied with a pro- mise of a visit soon but before he arrived -Jim had uncovered four large bones, later identified - as part of the back bone of the sloth. They were buried under five feet of gravel, just above the green clay. , Jim thought he had uncovered the remains of a dinosaur, know ing that the first dinosaur found in the United States was uncover ed near Haddonfield. N. J., in 1858, and that a second was found in 1947 near jSewell, N. J. Both towns are within 25 miles of Moorestown. But, instead, Richards and oth er paleontologists, identified the bones as those of a sloth the first oi the species ever reported from new jersey. . New Shewinr Open tAS en -:- Second Feature "Locky Losers" Willi the Bowery Boys Atom S Easing AEG Supp ecrecy 'ains ort fer widely. One looks like a large two-story square building with out windows. Another consists principally of an aluminum tank six feet in diameter and a little less than nine feet high. The idea behind the new move of the three nations is to make more detailed information on these devices available to colleges, universities and other Institutions the better to train experts in the reactor field. , WASHINGTON, Nov.: 23 - m American, British and Canadian governments are planning to ease secrecy about some of their at omic energy devices --but they say the move wont provide any hot tips to "rival nations." The U. S. atomic energy com mission announced today the three nations have adopted a revised "declassification code" which will permit the publication of certain information needed to design, build and operate atomic devices known as "low-power reactors' for research purposes. A "low power reactor" is a de vice in which atomic energy is re leased in a "controlled" way, as distinguished from the un control! ed release when a bomb exolodes. a "low-power reactor" also dif fers from a "high-power reactor" such as the kind in which pluton- ium is produced in practical quan uues ior use in atomic bombs. ine low-nower tvnm. nf -arMM, there are a number of varieties, Is designed for research - - that Is to give further information on the nature and control of atomte on ergy, and on how it might be ap plied to man's needs. In appearance these reactors dif- Expert Picks Top 8 'Hair Appeal Men City Collects Tax But Loses Money DECATUR, IL-(ff)-The city pf Decatur has received a tax pay ment from a Minnesota firm, but n ust money on ine oeai. The pay ment of one cent was a two per cent tax on gross fire insurance premiums collected in Decatur by the Hardware Mutual Insurance Co. of Minnesota during the last year. Gross premiums were 48 cents. City Treasurer Jack Lnftua timated the one-cent tax payment cost the city seven cents three cents for mailing the tax form, three for mailing a receipt, and one for materials and labor. Continuous Shews Today! Hurry, Folks .- , Must End Soon! l CaMna fWt" "Abbott A Costello In Foreign Legion" TOMORROW! "IN A LONELY PLACE" and " The Furies : C0TT0IIU00DS - Done EveY SaL llUe- o - end Ela : ;l"UEST COAST ninBLEBSJ Tkt riae'Western Band Beard on ESLM Tues. Eve. Also Yoa'Tt Enjoyed Daadng to t Amnsrlll, . ': Dandn? 9:30 to 1 A. IX. j . Adnv 1X3 Tax Xno. til HOLLYWOOD-(INS)-The eight men with the most "hair appeal" have been listed for a niche in the hall of fame by hair expert Pat ricia Stenz. The eight best are: j Cornel Wilde for the healthiest and best groomed head of hair. Rory Calhoun and Roy Rogers in second and third place. John Der ek for the tightest curls and Tony Martin for the best hair waves. Leopold Stokowski, the 68-year- old musical wmz, was listed as having the most hair for the most years. Nicest blonde hair belonged to Sterling Hayden in Miss ; Stenz opinion with Kirk Douglas in sec ond place. " The Sahara Desert contains sand dunes as high as 600 feet. New Today! 2 Major Adventure Hits! ,Ti:iC03ART SUSPENSE PICTURE VmiTIISSURPIllSI FINISH! ftoft lift Oiim GLORIA 68AHAUE rpiu I aaMkEU L7 I AWR15pS0OOCI1CTt tAMAIA MNM SlOYCXC2Y' . WMTtl pbgi euHrtaouNO iHomscoMa ' t"DcW kf MRMT MM Extra! Burs Bunny Cartoon News North Korean Kids, Marines Share Turkey ON THE! NORTHEAST KO REAN FRONT, Nov. 23-(ffr-U. S. marines and Koreans celebrated Thanksgiving together, today in the ruins of Hagaru, a town on the southern tip of Changjin re servoir. ' The day began with Thanks giving service t Hagaru'i .Pres byterian church The fter. Lee In Swet, Korean pastor, led the ser vices. He told about religion's struggle under the communists. Then the marines sat down in the ruins to a Thanksgiving tur key dinner which had been flown up to the front. Outside knots of hungry North Korean children peered in at all that food. And so all those North Korean kids were Invited inside and ate turkey dinner with the marines. lEnds Tonlghb The West Point Story" I C -M Centinaous Shews Every Saturday and Sunday! hir itew TOtionnow!fc ; The diampagno of musicals ringing with dozens of songs, sparkling with stars and glittering in gay, mardi gras Technicxjlorl ' SIB MMMjtffl Tn thm continental United States the temnerature has drOPDed to 80 degrees below zero in Montana, and risen to 134 degrees In the shade In Death Valley, Calif. ff -i h M-C-M's i" 1 J.Carrol Naish James Mitchell Richard Hagemart Clinton Sundberg v AltA . Now Showingl Open at 6:45 P. M. Starts at 7:15 p. II. Cartoon Carnival 1 Yvonne DeC&rlo Richard Greene In Technicolor DESERT HAWK" ' Barbara Stanwyck Wendell Corey THE FURIES Mat Daily from 1 P.M. Now! Savage Thrills! L-J S9S9V .C0TTEN UN0A DARTiELL JEFF CHANDLER : cotxn V.1LCE Co-Feature! Robert Rockwell "PRISONERS IN PETTICOATS" Opens 4:45 F. M. NOW1 ZOOMING New Adventure! , Action Co-Hit! Gene Autry 1UDESS OF THE KinsTUxa rxNES BRING THE FAMILY AND SHOP TONIGHT Many Stores Open 'Til 9 p. m. These Myuood inllerchants Her . VARREirS FIRESTONE STORE S 2095 Fairgrounds Rd. 3j9582 RADIO & RECORD SHOP 2017 Fairgrounds Rd. Ph. 3-7681 ''THE THING" by PHIL HARRIS In 43 and 78 RPMs Come In and Hear HI Open Friday Night Til 9 WE GIVE S&H GREEN STAMPS DOUBLE GREEN STAMPS ON TUESDAY TIL ZMAS I 1 ; Open Every Nil Til 9j O Friendly, Person al Sorvico O Convenient Shop ping Pleasure O Two Big Free Parking Lots Tin daU's Pharmacy 1933 N. Capitol i. Pho. 2-1424 RUDOLPH THE RED-NOSED REINDEER . STORY BOOK Hooiry Pharmacy S DOLL SPECIAL I I S On Group 1997 N. Capitol Ph. 3-6529 Woodbury's New .lanolin Rkh Group, GREATLY REDUCED! SOAP BUBBLE BATH 4 Bars . Package Book CO HAND CREAM $1.00 Value 50c Plus Tx ; 25 . ; 49c 8 J. F. Dougherty 2130 Tairgrounds Rd. 94721 sdnviini bicyqes TRICYCLES $4.95 i WAGONS 2.25;Pd . Open Fridcrf Nights Green Stamps on All Prescriptions Open Every Night Till 9. n rums HOLLYWOOD SHOE AND REPAIR SHOP 2045 Fairsrounds Bd. Phe. t FRL A SAT. SPECIAL ON ALL SLIPPERS AND RUBBER GOODS Expert Shoe Xepalr Open Each Dar I tat . Friday Saturday HI t set Vz 50 Rohland's Open Erenlngs TH 8 Open Sot. lU 9 p. m. 1983 N. Capitol UaUace Hardware Teur Marshall -Wells Stare ZtSC N. Capitol Th. 1-MTT BLACK IRON TRIVETS Authentic reproductions of antlqu Trivets In smoky $1 AA black Iron. I W Us Otar Lay Away Plan . Opn FzL NUes TH 8:00 8:00 p. m.r Mon.r Nov. 27 Salem High Auditorium Buy Season er Sinsie . - Performance Tlcketa at MILLER'S Telephone Seserrations ' 2-CSS2 -- Sponsored by Salea 20-39 Oub :