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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 25, 1951)
18 The Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Friday. May 25, 1951 New Regional U.S. Forester Visits Salem Both the quantity of the north west's forests, and the amount of fare, waste still occurring impress J. Herbert Stone, new regional UJ5. forester, he said Thursday in Salem on his first visit here. Stnri conferred with the state : forestry office staff and other for ' estry officials. He was guest at a " Marion hotel luncheon which in cluded Ted Rainwater, assistant, state forester; Merle Lowden. Port land, assistant regional forester in charge of information and educa tion office; Charles Ogle and Charles Stanford of Oregon Forest Industries; Albert Wiesendanger f Keep Oregon Green. Stone recently arrived in Ore gon to replace Horace J. Andrews, who was killed In March in an auto accident Previously he was for five years regional forester for an 11 -state area with headquarters in Atlanta, Ga. . . He pointed out that the Oregon Washington area is much smaller than his former region but that its 23,000,000 acres of national forest are 2 Vx times as great. Escalator Blamed in Damage Suit Suit for $10,013.50 damages for Injuries allegedly suffered in a fall on a moving sfairway was fil ed in Marion county circuit court Thursday by Mary C. Savage. The fall happened last January 25. Defendant is Roberts Bros., Sa lem store named by the plaintiff, Peele-Richmond company. Motor stair Division, Inc, and Montgom ery Elevator company. The complaint asks $13.50 spe rial damages for care of leg in Juries and $10,000 general dam ages. It charges negligence Dy de fendants in construction of the stairway so that the rail at its foot was not moving but a dummy, in alleged failure to meet require ments of Salem building code as to height of handrails and in lack ef synchronization between nana rails and steps. Frantz Rites Set Saturday At Corvallis t&tesaua New Service PEDEE Funeral services for George Frantz, 41, Hoskins farmer who died Tuesday of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Warner McIIenry Funeral home in Corval lis. Interment will be in the Kings Valley cemetery. Frantz's body was discovered by neighbors Tuesday at 6 p.m. Ben ton county Coroner Paul Scott said Frantz shot himself through the mouth while seated in his car parked in the garage at his home. Neighbors said he had been in ill health for about two years. Frantz was born at Hoskins and had lived there his entire life. Survivors include two brothers, Merle, Dallas, and Walter, In dependence; and four sisters, Kate Kindeman and Mrs. Lela Bevens, Corvallis, Mrs. Dora Mosier. Hos kins, and Mrs. Maude Mosier, Medford. Driving Cliarges Waited While Man Served Pen Term A Salem man is facing two driv ing charges more than three years old in Marion county district court. Action was delayed partly because he has spent much of that time in the state penitentiary. Earl Junior Bonney, route 4, box 166, Is to plead today on charges of having no operator's license and of driving while operator's license was suspended. Both were filed as of April 18, 1948, one by a state policeman and the other by a pri vate prosecutor. Bonney was re leased Thursday from .Marion county Jail on $75 total bail. On Dec 30, 1948, he was sen tenced to two years in prison on a charge of burglary not in a dwelling, later escaped and last June 5 was given an additional year's sentence for that crime. A Chinese husband is given le gal cause for divorce if his wife cannot get along with her in-laws. - For m Hmftaii ti'm only. 19 refunds . . . no z chan;ts . . no ip provals. , - ... IVetcj Forester Sees a 'Big One9 i , .'' s - --- - ft Bis trees in southeastern United States are straws compared to the nine foot Douglas fir cut displayed at the state forestry headquar ters io Herbert Stone, second from left, new U.S. regional forester in charge of the Pacific northwest district. With Stone 'are from left, Ted Rainwater. Albert Wiesendanger and Merle : Lowden. (Statesman photo.) Last-Hour Reprieve Saves l Twice-Condemned Germans M LANDSEERG, Germany, May war prisoners, sitting ?red jacketed word of their second stay of execution tonight only an hour and one minute before they were to hang. The chaplain at the American war crimes prison here informed the wives of the seven prisoners, gathered at a little hotel not far from the prison, that U.S. District Judge Walter, M. Bastian of Washington, D. C-, was holding up tne execu tions while he studied tne case The seven women had come from the prison red -eyed and weeDine only this afternoon. But there was no sign of: sadness to nieht. After expressing their hap pinesstney gathered in the hotel parlor j! while the chaplain; led a prayer I of thanks. None of them could believe their men would take the i steDS to the sallows a third time. The first stay of execution was granted while the UJS. supreme court studied a request for an ap peal in the case. The supreme court refused to review it. In Bonn, West German capital, German officials ' expressed the hope the hew stay might lead to a revision of the death sentences. Vice Chancellor Franz Bluecher, who had i sent last-minute appeal on behalf of the condemned men to theU. S.High Commissioner John J. McCloy, said, there were serious errors" in the trial pro ceedings. He added: j If these errors are 'not at least reviewed,5 then we will have a new nationalistic legend." By this: he clearly meant that a failure- to review the : dath sent ences iwould feed the spirit of German nationalism. J Many high German officials and many news papers have complained bitterly about the death sentences. The i seven prisoners, convicted by a U. S. war crimes court in 1946 and 1947, are: former S. S. Gen. Oswald Pohl, convicted of directing i the destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto and Of being in charge of Nazi concentration camps; George Schallermair, sent enced I lor concentration camp atrocities i S. S. Col. Paul Blobel, convicted of having 'ordered the killing; of 60,000 persons in a Kieve massacre; Werner Braune, convicted of a massacre of Jews and Gypsies; Eric Naumann, com mander of a unit whichexterminat ed 3,539 persons in three weeks; Otto Ohlendorf, chief of an ex termination team charged with having killed 90,000 Russians; and Hans Schmidt, formed adjutant of Buchenwald. i CRAWLING WITH GOOD OME CANTAUR, Sask. ijpy. If an abundance of reptiles means a good crop. Robert Nerada is all set. A warm sun enticed hundreds of garter , snakes into the open at his farm and so far hes killed 342. The snakes had a colony in an old garage. J Shop Fridays Til 9 P. M. uvi e) Bay the first pair at the regular price , . . get the second pair FSEEI . . jt I , 24-VSeven condemned German and grim in death row,' received Controversial Pelton Project Talk Delayed WASHINGTON, May U-iJPy-The power commission today post poned to June 11 a hearing sched uled for June 4 at Portland, Ore., on the proposal of Northwest Pow er Supply Co., Portland, to build a hydraulic project on the Deschutes river in Jefferson county, Oregon. The hearing will be on the pro posed Pelton dam project. The Northwest Power Supply Co. ori ginally filed the application to build the dam and sell all its pow er output to .Portland General Electric, Pacific) Power and Light, and Washington Water Power Co. The latter two private utilities withdrew, leaving Portland Gen eral Electric as the only sponsor. PGE submitted: an amended pro posal for construction of the dam earlier this month. The! amended plans were intended to meet cri ticism that the dam would damage fish runs. j The state fish commission , re jected the plan; anyway insisting fish runs still would be; damaged. It was the second rejection by the fish commission. DOG DDIS GUARDING HOME MONTREAL-P)-A brave bull dog gave his life to protect his master's savings here. Jour mask ed bandits who entered" the home of Ferdinand Chartrand shot the bulldog when it attacked them, then fled without any loot. HOMEMAKERS AGREE Mrs. Nellie Slow of Portland says: Tike most Pacific Northwest ern ers, we really go for salads especially when they are nude with &estern fruits or vegetables and Kraft Cottage Cheese. Yes, Kraft. yTc want to be sure of that wonderful flavor and freshness !M Flynn to i aice ! for Postal s I tor SHERIDAN C. Wayne Flynn, Sheridan postmaster since 1946, will be sworn in as a postal 'in spector June 1. He earned the pro motion f by 1 receiving the third highest mark in the nation in com petitive: examinations. j f Flynn will take his oath at the Salem postoffice Friday, June 1, at 8 ajn., then will leave for Eu gene to begin a six-month train ins course which will precede his appointment to a permanent post in the Seattle postoffice division. The division includes Washington, Oregon; Idaho and Montana, i Flynn received his high mark in competition with 1,082 applicants for inspector positions. Only "300 of this total passed the final tests. A native of Sheridan, Flynn was graduated from public schools here and attended Oregon State col lege. He served in the navy during World War II from Sept. 19, 1942, to Nov. 16, 1945, as a chief radio technician. He entered the postal service; as a clerk at the Sheridan postoffice in August, 1942, and was appointed postmaster in Oc tober, 1946, after returning from the service. Bride of Jewel Thief Suspect Disillusioned ! LOS ANGELES, May 24-()-A disillusioned 18-year-old bride of two months, whose husband is un der arrest i in a $155,000 jewel theft, sobbed today: j "I'll never trust a man again for the rest of my life." Pretty,' dark-eyed Virginia Lea Fasenmyer of Kansas City saw her happy! honeymoon come to an e i in San Diego Tuesday with the arrest of Thomas Raphael Fasen myer, jr., 21. She says he's 'the son of well-to-do Kansas City, Kas., auto dealer. He was. booked on suspicion of grand theft. ''I'm from poor but honest par ents,", she sadly told reporters. "I have worked hard at domestic jobs ever since I quit school four years ago." j i 4 Tears splashed the dress in which she was wed to Fasenmyer as she said: "I trusted him so much.! Wherever he went in Kan sas City he seemed to have such fine friends." f The couple was returned here after arrest in San Diego, where police said Fasenmyer tried to sell diamonds to gem brokers.; ! Capt. G rover Armstrong of West Los Angeles police said i $145,000 worth of loot, reported stolen Monday from the home of Mrs. Malcom McNaghten, department store heiress, was recovered. Most of it Was found in the glOve com partment of young Fasenmyer's car, he said. ; Virtually all the world's cryo lite, used m aluminum manufac ture, is mined in Greenland. ) You're Invited!. I Salem 4-H Clubs'; SPRING SHOW j ! r i Today and Saturday Exhibits on display daily from 8:30 a. m. to 9 p. m. at Jan's, 237 N. Liberty ' Dress Revue Tonight, l 8:00, at Jan's Baking Contest Tomorrow 1st 8:30 a. m., and 1 p. m., at Port land Gas Sc Coke Co., 199 S. Commercial. i NO ADMISSION ! ' MADE BY THE j FOLKS WHO KNOW i CHEESE BEST ! Oath InsDec 1 : J . i V -. r PIP 0 The 8:30 lovely A complete range of colors and patterns which are exclusive at ELfstroms this week only. Reg. 2.98 at i ; I , j ! 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