f I li i v ,. v ; v 2 The Statesman Salem, Om v Pretty Vaughan ject Of Controversy WASHINGTON, Feb. 20 "--The White House confirmed today that a 41-year-old Australian bru nette, who became a permanent resident of the United States un der special legislation passed by congress, is acting as secretary to President Truman's army aide, Mai. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan. The secretary is Mrs. Veronica Jolly, a $4,600-a-year civilian em ploye ol the army. She served with a long series of high-ranking American officers in the Pacific during World War II. Presidential Secretary Joseph Short told a news conference that Mrs. Jolly was assigned to the White House on Dec. 1. He made the statement after being question ed about references to her in a New York column. . Cholly Knickerbocker, column ist for the New York Journal American, wrote in the newspaper yesterday that "a former Austral ian who got her United States cit izenship in no time at all, had set the capital "buzzing." The column went on to say that the White House was "whispering about Harry Vaughan's beautiful private secretary who was rushed into her American citizenship and is now firmly established in the White House. Asked about this, the only thing Short would say about the Knick erbocker column was: "Is that his real name?' Short said Mrs. Jolly became t eligible for federal employment after a private bill was passed by congress last year admitting her to the United States as a perma nent resident. The bill was passed without en dorsement of the department of Justice. Phone Firm to Appeal Rate Boost Denial Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. served notice Tuesday it will attempt to force the issue of high er telephone rates by a mandamus 'action before the Oregon Supreme urt. 1 ! The requested rate increase was denied recently by Public Utili ties Commissioner George Flagg. Subsequently the telephone com jpany took the matter to Marion county circuit court where Judge George Duncan turned down its jrequest for a temporary injunc ition to prevent Flagg from enforc ing his order. Telephone officials filed a com plaint in supreme court yesterday ideclaring their intention of ap pearing before the court next Tuesday to request a mandamus action against Judge Duncan. If auch mandamus were granted, it would open the way for higher telephone rates pending a final de cision in the courts. Shortages Stall Work on Dam ' PORTLAND, Feb. 20-;p-The shortage of critical materials, par ticularly metals, is affecting con struction on major civil works pro jects, Brig. Gen. O. E. Walsh, di vision engineer, told a meeting of the Columbia basin interagency committee here today. Walsh said the shortage of steel, aluminum, copper and copper-base alloys has particularly affected re cently awarded contracts requir ing the use of such- metals. Walsh said practically all work has been suspended until spring on highway and railroad reloca tion at Lookout Point dam in Ore gon's Willamette valley. Work on other dams is progressing, Walsh 'added. A AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY WOMEN PRESENT Bennett Cerf in an informal lecture Changing Styles in American Humor" 8:00 p. m., Thursday, March 1 Salom High School Tickets available at WKls Musk Store $1.20 IndL tax Subj WednesdaY;TbruaTT-21 1951 ) Columbus Boychoir Captivates Audience By Maxine Buren Statesman tIusic Editor Thirty little cherubs, members the audience at Salem .high school sic ranging from a 14th century motet to a medley of American tunes. Their repertoire included ,the religious songs of the -early composers and a very modern version of Comin Through the Rye. ! Beginning with the five-part motet by Jacob Handl, the program Col. ffillaijyi Plans Talks on t S Civil Defense I li The message of the citizens own part in civil defense is 'making the rounds these days. f 1 j ' Groups throughout Marion covin ty are being briefed on the newj defense setup by L.t.1 CoL Mark Hillary, its director. ; t One such meeting is called for 8 p.m. Thursday at Roberts grange hall for all citizens ol that area. Denver Young, Marion county sheriff and defense fcoordinator, will preside. Following the pro gram, refreshments wiH be served by grange women, j Colonel Hillary also! is present ing the outline of defense to each I community s govciuuig tuuutii. o far he has appeared before five city councils, includirig Mt. An gel Monday night and, Woodburn last night. . j City, to Close Offices On Thursday Most city and county offices la Salem will close Thursday in obf servance of Washington's birth day, f . I ; 1 1 Emergency services will con tinue operating and fthe county clerks office will issue dog license that day. ! i ! Salem postoffice will operate 0 its regular holiday schedule with only special delivery j mail i to bt delivered. i Banks are split. Salem branch of First National will remain open; the Willamette Valley and both branches of U. S. National will close. I 1 i State offices will remain open because the legislature fwill be meeting, but most of them will have only skeleton crews on hand. Parking meters can' be j ignored for the holiday, police state. j 1 i YMCA's Giils Swim Tonight The Salem YMCA girls swim ming team travels to Portland to night for an engagement with the Northeast Y strokeri. tonight's action will warm the local girls up for the National AAUj meet at Portland's Cosmopolitan flub on Saturday. j Among girls making thetrip to night are Sidney Kromer Shirley Wilcox, Carolyn Parsons, Doro thy Penhorwood, Sue Young, Dor is Hein and Laurel Warner. Couiity I'd pike to Know... : I t i You may have heard that a lawsuit has recentrjr been filed by the Antitrust ..Division in Washington, D. C. to break up Standard of California as well aa six other West Coast oil companies. Many people have written us protesting this ac tion, and have asked pertinent questions. We feet they should be answered for everyone. And we take this Way of doing so. If you have a question we urge you to write: f J j Td Lixjsto ICnow" 225 Bush St., San Francisco 20 i li mil: - ' : j J : 44 - n cith Varied Program of Columbus Boychoir. captivated "Tuesday night in a concert of mu continued with compositions by the Spansih composer deVittoria and Pagerolesi. Three parts of the Ceremony of Carols by Benjamin Bretten followed. Provides Mirth j The Mozart comic opera Bastien and Bastienne provided mirth for the graceful young girls and the gallant gentlemen' who danced the minuet were easily recognizable as the members of the chorus. Sev eral of the "girls" brought down the house with their coy looks and artful winks. The final group included more modern numbers. The Ave Maria Brahms Lullaby and the Lord's Prayer by Malotte were sung by the chorus with soprano soloists. Breadbaking by I Bartok, Joshua Fit the Battle anct Shortnin Bread were lively arrangements which gave contrast to fthe program. The Echo by di Lasso proved perhaps the most popular of the lighter numbers. It was an inter esting imitation of the echo. Sweet Voices j I don't know anything sweeter than a boy soprttho's voice unless it is the face of the boy so earn estly singing. This group of young singers showed perfection of train ing by their director Herbert Huff man and excellent support from the accompanist, s Donald Bryant. The latter's solo group included Fifteenth Hungarian Rhapsody by Liszt and Revolutionary Etude by Chopin. It is interesting to know that the boys travel in an especially equipped 'His with schoolroom desks and a loud speaker system so classes may be held while on the move. A piano is included, so practice is done enroute. Reclin ing chairs make napping possible when hotel accommodations are not available at regular hours and a refrigerator holds lunches for hungry boys. j Brig. Genl Bradley To Take Gommaiid Of 25th Division .1 U. S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD QUARTERS, Korea, Wednesday: Feb. 21-WVBrig, Gen. Joseph S. Bradley today was announced as the new commander of the U. S. 25th division in i Korea, succeed ing Maj. Gen. William B. Kean. Col. John (Mike) Michaelis, who gained fame as leader of the 27th (Wolfhound) regiment of the 25th during a series of "fire bri gade" actions, was named to suc ceed Bradley as assistant com mander of the division. Colcnel Michaelis recently was recommended for promotion to brigadier-general Bradley, a West Point graduate, arrived in Korea with the U. S. second division last August. PAROLES REFUSED WASHINGTON, Feb. 20 - (JT) -The U. S. parole board said today it has turned down parole appli cations by seven of the so-called "Hollywood ten," convicted of contempt of congress. "Would Marion County 4 Jail Escapee LiWyomingJail Robert Wodson Morrow, 40, who sawed his way out of Marion coun ty jail one sunny Sunday last April, is in custory of Dillon, Wyo., authorities, Marion County Sheriff Denver Young reported Tuesday. Morrow escaped with four oth er county jail prisoners here on the afternoon of April 24. All have been apprehecded except Edward Maynard Sharlow. Sheriff Young said Morrow had been arrested in Wyoming on a traffic violation charge. His fingerprints were sent to the FBI in Washington, D. C-, who checked their list of wanted men and notified Young. The sheriff then I wired Dillon officers. Dis trict Attorney Edward Stadter, jr., said his office would start extra dition proceedings immediately. Morrow, whose address was list ed as 3995 Cherry ave.; was await ing grand jury hearing on a check forgery charge when the mass break took place during church services in the jaiL The other escapees besides Mor row and Sharlow were William Hector Lovejoy and Donald J. Barker, both . recaptured seven hours later by Young, and Donald Elmer Floodstrom, 22, who was nabbed three days later in a south Salem auto court. TO EXAMINE WM. COOK OKLAHOMA CITY Feb. 20-;P) U.S.: District Judge Stephen S. Chandler today appointed an Oklahoma City psychiatrist to ex amine William E. Cook, 23, ad mitted slayer of six persons. Cook was captured in Mexico Janu ary 14. The first white settlement in New Mexico was made in 1598. OPEN AT 6:45 - RE-OPEIIS Savage' Thrills! '' fe. m m mm JUUUSEDf 1 1 X Ai niti UI1AKA brealung up r 4 ' I Luu i Tiniest-Woman in .World Expectant 'LOUISIANA, Mo, Feb- 20-P)-The. woman who claims she is the "smallest woman in the world" is. expectant. 1 She is Mrs. Laxronda Evans, 31 years old and about 24 inches tall. Her doctor, Dr. G. L. Bilyea, said today the baby would be delivered at his osteopathic hospital here about mid-April by caesarian op eration. ' j Mrs. Evans 59-year-old hus band, Alva, is four feet talL The Evans, who live at nearby Bowl ing Green, were with the Clyde Beatty circus last year. Supervisors Appointed by Rex Putnam ' (Appointment of Irene Hallberg a&d Dora Crouter as elementary supervisors for the state depart ment of education was announced Tuesday by Rex Putnam, state superintendent of public instruc tion. . Both appointees will be under the direction of Florence Beards ley, director1 of elementary edu cation. They! will assist schools in meeting standardization require ments. Miss Hallberg is a graduate of the Wisconsin state teachers col lege and Northwestern university at Evanston, 111., where she took her M. A. degree. Miss Crouter was formerly con sultant in education of visually handicapped children for the spe cial education division 'of the state department of education. She has been on leave of absence for the past eight months to do graduate work at Stanford university. Miss Crouter received her bachelor de gree from Eastern Oregon college or education at LaGrande and taught in the elementary schools of Oregon for several years. i toiN 2-7029 STARTS AT 7:1 5 TOinTE! Roaring Fun! mat big oil companies affect national defense? Mrs. Marie-Louise Auer, Pasadena houserifc, writes: ult seems tampering with our industries, as the antitrust lawyers want to do. Or does up big oil companies affect national defense! Here at Standard, one of the seven West ern oil companies under attack, we see dear public benefit in having big compan- j'Of coarse, in time of crisis, military ' get first calL One example: aviation gaso-i linea, la the last ant months of 1950, la ; the Wwt alone, theee aeeds jumped 275. Big oil companiss ;i ' ; f The national government itself oa oar bigmem and iMtegratum to bandit rlr . - -it.- .' i. uairvm - i . . . Plan Defense of Milk Control A i group of I Oregon dairymen will : meet at the Senator - hotel Thursday at 10 a Jn. to; consoli date their opposition to any chan ges in Oregon's milk control law. - Robert Bullivant, attorney; for the Oregon Milk Distributors as soociation, wili be maini speaker. County representatives, picked at a series of meetings sponsored by the Dairy Co-op last year, will attend. ! -j . . Meantime, - another group of dairymen, led by the Oregon Farm Bureau federation, is continuing its efforts to come to terms with consumer group leaders.! The group meeting here Thurs day will hear a proposal for ap pointment by the governor of a special committee including con sumer representatives, to make recommendations on milk control policies to the state board of ag riculture. j H-Type Bomb Said Exploded in Nevada i i . ENDICOTT, N. Y, Fell 20P Dr. David Bradley, a physicist who observed early j atomic tests, said today he believed recent explo sions in Nevada were tests of hydrogen-type bombs. Bradley said he had reached this conclusion by mathematical cal culations based on reports that some of the explosions broke win dows 80 miles from the scene of the detonations and that destruc tion covered a radius of eight miles. There are about 20,000,000 acres of forest land in New Mexico. Elxinore Snnrfavf Oa Stage Teniglit! "QUEEN FOK j A NIGHT j Screen; I "LADY WITHOUT PASSPORT" THE PTJtEBAIX" Second obvious demand com from ia dostry. Has anyoM fbrgottsa how much America's strength during World War II depended on industrial production? It supplied tt. takes big companiea to supply hit 1 Indirect but important dtfun oontTfho- tioa is oar bis; ! oar taxes wars 1 accompany, . ; would as 1 a k on rnone LOS ANGELES, Feb. 20 -UF)- Strike authorization was voted to night by the Independent order of repeatermen and toll testboard men against the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. . - A count of mail ballots showed 637 to 101 in favor of the strike. - A union: spokesman said the vote does not mean an immediate walkout. Negotiations over wages OTES AS F. M. Newt DtskkArilb! mm COLOK CABTOONI WTOpAY I M ! i , I ' f! ! i . ' t illil w I 1 . w i itn in the business at Sf . --- ureg Strike Favored JSLAJSSQ CO-BIT! -" ; pKS MEET- fi&f : rM&- JUDY HOLLIDAY f S . As BiUia Dawn, pnfty, ?N 0 I blonde, and pretty dumbl J 'i I J with a waaknoss ' ' I . for Mink ... and Other J I S Waaknass T J O The Nation Is Roaring! ' tO From Coast -to-Coast, 'Pll )i I the Top Uvfih tloi of 4VjVT : J J All Tim ! 7 h : ; ,VV ' '- M ,-.. - . . .. . '. .. . . . - . . . . .V. we serve you well. But let's consider now just "bigness" and national xief ens ex TJ. S. tax payments. Last year over t35,O0OXXX As one we pay more taxes than we wreaLied. la Saa Frandsco The union represents 800 work ingxon ana pans oz laano ana n vada. Pay now -ranges from $77 to S3 a week. The union is seek ing $33 to $97. . . ! EGGS TO JTJHF AGACT PORTLAND, Feb. 20 -V tgz prices will climb another cent at Portland, wholesale markets to morrow, distributors said today. This wiU be the third one-cent rise this week. i Starts Today Oyea C:i5 1 Blare's K3fB' SECOND FEATUXE Daagater of the Jaagle" 1 ' i With IMm Han j I ' . I . . , a j i ft w-' JO -1 to rne like a bad time to be it matter? Would breaking all times. We believe r rF3 Z v: - - v m I i Another direct rnlt of company bignmm is protract improvement. Big rrmtpsniat do naniira oa a big scale. Example: the Standard-developed oils which i sobmarmea range 800 . And while all this is going oa. Standard! -bigmen and integrvtiom enable as to key on producing, refining, transporting and deliverxngprodocU to yea. Isn't this what yon uwit from' roar oil company? t 1 f i hard Jobs Right now, Standard is oper ating a D.S. atomic research project aa ; STANDARD CI! VMf Al JIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA plans'a&sad tj senra yon better