The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 07, 1951, Page 2, Image 2

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Tixm Statesman! SJeln. -&qoil- Ultuidcrri May-' 7 lftil
Russia, China':
Said Agreed on
Korean Policy
By Spencer M odea
TAD7EH, Formosa, May MV
Reports put out in this Chinese
Nationalist capital today said the
Chinese Beds and Russia had con
cluded a secret agreement an new
manpower to drive the United Na
tions forces out of Korea.
" The reports are said to have
come from underground sources on
the mainland. Confirmation and
more specific attribution are im
possible. The reports declared the
two main points of the alleged
agreement were.
1. Red China would send an ad
ditional 600,000 troops to Korea;
and
2. Russia would provide an 'in
ternational volunteer force" of ten
Soviet-equipped divisions for use
In Korea. -
Six of these international divis
ions, the reports said, would be
composed of Japanese taken pris
oner by the Russians during the
last week of World War II; two
would consist of Mongolian cav
alry: and the remaining two would
' be drawn from Poland, East Ger
many, Czechoslovakia and other
Soviet satellites in Europe.
The Nationalist sources which
. circulated this story - said the
agreement was made in Moscow
after direct talks between Premier
Stalin and the Chinese Red chair
man, Mao Tze-tung.
Tito Trees' 1,097
Political Prisoners
To Build Rail Line
BELGRADE, May 6-fP-Yugo-clavia
today freed 1,097 political
. prisoners who were jailed on char
ges of supporting the Russian led
cominform.
The decree of amnesty was is
sued through Interior Minister Al
exaqder Rankovic, boss of securi
ty police. The former prisoners
will go to work the official press
reported on a "volunteer" basis
,tj prove their loyalty by building
a railway line between Breza and
Vares, two industrial centers in the
g Republic of Bosnia.
In telegrams of repentance, as
quoted by the press, the prisoners
recorded their loyalty to Tito,
tate and party and claimed they
saa Deen misled by, propaganda
from Moscow. !
The cork oak tree takes 20 years
to produce usable bark;
New Shewing -Open 6:4S
- - -
Second Feature!
TOUGH ASSIGNMENT"
Den Barry, Marjorie Steele
-
PHONE 3-3721 OPEN 6:45 P. M.
STARTS TOMORROW!
Tin Entertaining lHovie
T " "
0KB EKilfff
5 nnrvtfa
W " Vv
At Regular Admissions!
Co-Feature
Fourth Screen
Packed V.1:h C!sl
4-Year-Old Quid Cut
By Falling Lawn Shears
A pair of rlawn shears slipped
from a garage wall and injured
four year oia wauace voniana
about noon Sunday, city first aid
men reported.1
Wallace incurred a forehead cut
that -required four stitches. His
parents are f Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Vohland, 1243 Elm st.
Holds Fail to
Protect
Lady Wrestler
BOMB Ga4 May 6-(JPyA. tall, at
tractive blonde walked Into , the
ordinary's office and announced:
"I want a pistol toter's license."
"Why?" Ordinary Hillis Hol
lingsworth asked.
"I work at! a restaurant she
related. I get off late at night,
and I walk about a half a mile to
my home. t H
"Some men know what time I
come by every night, and they've
been " bothering me. The other
night, one of them grabbed me
around the neck. I threw him over
my shoulder; but he kicked me in
the ribs and broke two."
Further questioning disclosed
her name was Becky Taylor, her
age 19, that she has been a profes
sional wrestler under another
name and that she had won 18
of 20 bouts, j .i;
Miss Taylor said she had figured
she was able to take care of her
self, until she got her ribs broken
when she applied the hammerlock
to the man the other night.
She got the license.
Workers End
Textile Strike
DANVILLE, Va May -(P)-Union
workers voted late today to
call off their five-week-old strike
at Dan river mills, customarily the
pattern setter for the southern
textile industry.
" By an almost unanimous stand
ing vote, Dan river employes ac
cepted yesterday's recommenda
tion of the i CIO textile workers
union of America that the south
wide walkout ! of 40,000 persons be
halted. -' f f f
There was -no immediate com
ment from - Dan river officials,
who only- yesterday turned down
a plea front Federal Conciliation
Director Cyrus Ching that the
wage dispute in the southern tex
tile industry be submitted to a
three-man mediation board.
STERLING OUT OF DANGER
DENVER, May 6-P)-Donald J.
Sterling, managing editor of the
Oregon Journal at Portland, was
reported out of danger today from
a heart condition that caused his
hospitalization here April 28.
SHIRLEY TEMPLE ILL
TULSAifOkla, May 8 - VP)
Movie actress; Shirley Temple un
derwent an j emergency appendec
tomy at Hill crest Memorial hospi
tal here tonight. Hospital attend
ants reported the 23-year-old
screen star was recovering nicely.
...... - '4 .
n
Making A f
Treat!
Gasl Funl ;
Pretty
I I'--. : . . f k I
r nrn r-n n JHr:1-r :
V II "I 11 Jf f cswtiitetl!
HattjatMt
tantitolpsfKt
J ftaiiZai
m
W '
Deputy DA
!
" 1,
A.
Joseph Meier, wh has been ap
pointed depnty district attorney
for Marlon county. He Is a vet
eran of World War n, command
er of a national guard company
and a 1950 graduate of Willam
ette university college ef law.
Booklet Tells
How to Survive
In Prison Camp
CHICAGO, May 6-JPhA hand
ful of sugar is a weapon for sabo
tage, a clump of weeds is dinner,
a canteen a pressure cooker.
These are tips on survival for
the living dead of 1941-45, former
prisoners of war in Japan and'
Germany.
Here are a few samples from a
booklet, "How to Survive in a
Prison Camp, planned by the
American Ex-Prisoners of War,
Inc., now meeting in Chicago:
All meat is edible, regardless of
the kind of animaL And weeds
and tree bark 'have food value,
too.
Sometimes, the trick Is In the
preparation. A j tin can makes a
good stove. A canteen is a pres
sure cooker especially good for
cooking green things to prevent
precious vitamins from draining
off.
A little sugar ruins a gasoline
engine a simple way to sabotage
enemy equipment.
A razor blade is a handy flint
when matches ; aren't available.
A - man can ! drink, cook and
wash with just a quart of water
a day if he knows how. (The ex
prisoners say the IL S. daily aver
age per person is 300 gallons.)
Double up, and live. One man
under one blanket may freeze in
cold weather, but two men under
two blankets , stand a better
chance. " 1
BOY DROWNS IN POND
. VANCOUVER, Wash, May 6
(AVRobert Joe Butterfield, 12,
drowned Saturday while swim
ming in a farm pond near here. A
friend, John Harvey, 13, also of
Vancouver, said he - and Butter
field had crossed the pond and
were swimming- back when the
boy disappeared. The body was
recovered.
ENDS TODAY (MON.)
"Abbott A Costeno Meet
The Invisible Man"
Roy Borers
"Sunset In The West"
X Dj tsij&cj.assi
v tZxIua ts&s tat "
Plus!
Color ; Cartoon
-1 -.
ii
Porky Chops
it
-
) t Tk lmr$...wi
'Investigated
Pastor Chides !
tion
PORTLAND, May 6 - UPi-
"Blessed are the peacemakers for
they shall be called the children
of God." A
That was the text of the sermon
preached here tonight by the Rev.
Fred W. Mueller, pastor -of the
Laurelhurst Baptist church.
He told police recently a private
detective had warned him to re
sign or face a scandal involving
a woman: Sunday school teacher.
Mueller told i the congregation
he had met the woman to discuss
mysterious phone calls they both
had received. They were ap
proached by a detective, Mueller
said, while sitting in his. car at
a drive-in restaurant.
The detective. It later devel
oped, was hired by six members
of his congregation.
"We've had some In our midst
here the last month who were no
peacemakers ..." Mueller said,
apparently referring to the six.
The congregation gave him a
vote of confidence the text of
which was prepared by the church
deacons. It contained a statement
that Mueller would leave the
church soon to enter another Held.
Sweet Home
May Day Fete
Next Friday
Statesman Newt Serric
SWEET HOME May Day exer
cises will be held Friday, May 11,
on the high school grounds, both
high and grade schools taking part.
The program will begin at 9:30 a.
m. with the crowning of Queen
Donna Casebolt. Princesses will be
Alice Cook, Bonnie Anderson, Bar
bara Atkinson, Delores Moore,
Penny Norquist and Barbara Ben
nett. Following the coronation of
the queen will be two May Pole
dances. The afternoon program
will consist of games and music
The Richfield Service station cat
highway 20 and Holley road, oper
ated for the past five years by
Robert McLean, has been leased to
E. G. Chambers of Portland who
took over operations.
Jack Gibson, who spent a 10
day furlough visiting friends and
relatives, left -for San Francisco
Thursday.
Donna McSerley, who has been
critically ill in a Salem hospital,
is reported as Improving.
NO NECKTIES IN TOKYO
TOKYO, Monday, May T - (JP)
American soldiers uncomfortably
viewing the approach of Tokyo's
sizzling summer got good news to
day: The new order requiring
neckties has been rescinded.
Mow hitch your wagon
automobile business. A
Consresra
i ii
n i N
' .
of what America likes that no other oaf shows such a vast
percentage of new owners In the last five years I Something
basically good must underlie this popularity. It may be the) '
whip-acflon eagerness of Mercury's famed Indianapolis
Pace Car engine. It may be Mercury's wonderful gasV
economy winner In the Mobllgas Economy Run for
two straight years I Or It may be that the 1951 Mercury b
available with Merc-O-Matlc Drive the revolutionary
new crutomctic transmission that Is simpler, smoother end mere
eawaakseaBBBBnanaBBBBBBBj
efficient. Corn take th Drive of Your life" In the most
' exc&ing car of 19511 There's ust nothing Lke It on the roadl
thrifty Toud-0-MrSe
iierc-O-Maflc Drive, cam
Farm Operators' Join -Critical
Occupation9 List
ft WASHINGTON, May 6 (ff
Farm operators - are among the
workers, added today to the labor
department's?list of "critical oc
cupations." -ji. v-s .--4
I The list, now revised to include
58 categories, serves as a guide to
draft boards in passing on appli
cations for occupational defer
ments. It serves in similar way
in the defense department's con
sideration of reservists and nation
al guardsmen.
(Jr,. -'-r:y;
CYCLE RACERS KILLED ;
i FERRARA, Italy, May 9-(JPy
Two motorcycle racers were killed
and five other sever ly injured in
& National Motorcycle race here
today. Duido Leoni and Raffaeole
Albert! died after one racer skid
ded and six others piled on top
of him. r . j
18th STRAIGHT FOR OSC
i McMINNVTLLE, May 6 - (JP
Oregon State college marked up its
18th consecutive baseball victory
here by defeating Linfield 15 to
7. . The losers led Oregon State
twice at the end of the first in
ning 4 to 0, and at the end of the
third 5 to 4. Oregon State took an
8 to 5 lead in the fifth and never
relinquished.
BIGHT
II0Y7!
And!
Rnth Roman
In
"Lightning Striki
2)
-LULLABY
OF
BROADWAY
TftAWHIDE"'
TOMORROW
"BEDTIME '
FOR BONZO"
D. O. A."
0
to the fastest-rising star in the
rugged and beautiful car with
OtmrdiU wbldh. Dam
ea ejore eqrwana)
m Twice)""
200.000 TO TAKE TEST " v
WASHINGTON, May 6-(Pr-The
man in charge of the forthcoming
aptitude tests for i draft-eligible
college men estimated today that
200,000 wiU : take the first one
May 26. ' .) ..-::u'
West Gives Final Terms
To Russia at Bis 4 Meet
f ...): . ' ... -v.v .
LONDON, I, May 6-a?-BritIsh
Foreign Secretary Herbert Morri
son said tonight the western pow
ers have made-their final conces
sions at the deputy foreign min
isters meeting in Paris, r
It is strictly up to the Russians
now to decide whether there wiU
be a meeting of the four power
foreign ministers, he declared. ?
TOMMY LUKE STRICKEN, s " i
PORTLAND. May 6-CAV-Tommy
Luke, Portland florist, suffered
heart attack; today while cruising
with friends on the Columbia riv
er. He was taken to Physicians and
Surgeons hospital j where his con
dition ! was i reported as "fairly
good." !,: i . . ..j -:
Open -Staxto at Piakt
John Wayne i
Pgtricla Neal
Ward Bond
"OPERATION
PACIFIC
Gertrude Berg
Philip Loeb
-MOUY" !
era tjcyi i
)
t Mat. Daily from 1 PJVL
NOW1 A Picture You ! i
Will Never Forget! :
Damon Ronyan Co-bit!
afono.'s-Em
tsjiHiij'AlaWHfe 'Aisled
so much
hi -.
l f NOW SHOWING
France Expels
Iranian Official
PARIS, May MVThe French
government expelled IradJ Eskan
dary of Iran from France last
. Chuck's Si oab EIonrD
WILL . BE CLOSED
EI0IID21Y
AIID EVOY MONDAY TZXESEAFTE3
Open Days a Week for Youx Dining
& Dandng Plecgcrt .
JUNE 4th TO JUNE 17th
.14 DAYS ONLY!
NIGIITLY AT S30 MATINEES 2:39
MATINEES JUNE 10, IS AND 11
Prices: Nltes and Matinees, $L50, ZZ9, $3.00, $3.60 (Ut IncL)
Let the Postman Boy Your Seats
THE PERFECT GUT FOR GRADUATION!
Ne Phone Orders, Please
rS'r u Mail Orders Now! !
X am tacloslnf money order ( ) la tho amount of f ' for
check ( )
Mat. t ) arfmaaco ticket at $ tt the ,
Nit : (BBBiber) i at)
Nam , ' : .
(Please Print) .
AddrcM ' "' . m"'.--',.
Pleate Print) -
ry . ' ' " ' Zone State ,
' sure to caeloco tamped!, self -addressed enTelopo. OA.
UUUuaUOLUiJllll j )
j :
night. E&kandary is secretary of the
Progressive Tudeh (Communist)
party and was an adviser to the
World Federation cf Trade un
ions (WFTU). f is
- No reason was given for the expulsion.
a
ADD,
OHDEH DYOIUL
Shipstads and Johnson
MMMfM
FD95t
WARNER TvlOTOR CO.
C3 IL Ccmmsrclil IC:!:a
Nsv of
Tho AVorld!