The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 05, 1951, Page 1, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    U.S. Supreme Court
Upholds Conviction
Of Top Communists
..' i ; f ... ; i
WASHINGTON, June 4-W)-The supreme court today upheld the
conspiracy convictions of the U. S. communist party's 11 op leaders,
holding that they "intended to overthrow the government of Jhe Unit
ed States as speedily as the circumstances would 'permit? 'f.'V 'f J;-"
' With Justices Douglas and Black dissenting from t' -history-niaking
decision, and call it a blow against freedom of ch, the
0tPn
vw sag
S m m W M
wnn infiatinn was threatenin
to touch off another rocket on the,
price jet-plane Alacy s - in ew
York altered the direction earth
ward. Gimbel's across 34th street
It has lasted for days, with neither
countered and a price war was on.
one calling "uncle." Macy's clings
to its slogan of underselling by six
per cent and Gimbel's replies with
its "nobody but nobody undersells
Gimbers." The result has been a
buying orgy in the metropolis.
Nominally the price cutting
started when Macy's, always a
holdout against fair trade laws,
seized on the supreme court, de
cision exempting non-signers from
fair-trade pricing, and cut six per
cent on 6,000 fair-trade items.
Another motive doubtless was in
mind, and that was to reduce in
ventories. The bulge in stocks
has extended from manufacturers
to distributors and retailers. Pre
viously the price slashing had
started on TV and radio sets to
lower inventories which' two
months ago were 200 per cent of
those a year ago. in iaci me gen
eral average of inventories of all
goods was 31 per cent higher for
350 department stores leporting
onH manufacturers at the end of
April reported their inventories
were 29 per cent nigner wan at
the same time in 1950.
I The simple fact was that the
greatly increased productive ca
pacity of our industry had been
turning out more goods than the
public, was willing to buy. The
flurry of forward buying set . off
by the Korean war was deceptive,
and the slowdown due to diver
sion of materials and labor to re
armament was not as fast as had
been anticipated. Hence the
(Continued on editorial page, 4)
More Money
Re
PnnrfTi mi ef
VjUUIUlUUJV
Additional funds may be re
miiTfri hnfnr wnrk can start on
Marion county's proposed new
courthouse,
i This was brought out in a meet
ing Monday of the courthouse
building commission ana arcni
tects from the office of Pietro
Belluschi of Portland.
The building was planned ori
ginally to cost about $1,500,000.
When bids were called recently,
However, tne lowest bidder was
about $400,000 above that mark,
Vtaouca tt ctoadilv ricincr material
costs. . -.
Architects then went to work
to revise the plans in an effort to
shave off the surplus expense.
Their report Monday, according to
County Judge Rex Hartley, show
ed that only a portion of the
$400,000 was chopped off.
"To bring the building costs
within the original estimate," said
Judge Hartley, "we would have
to leave - out many necessities,
which would mean an incomplete
courthouse.", s ;
Judge Hartley said the court
was as yet uncertain how much
additional revenue will be need
ed over the original estimate or
how the money will be raised. The
court, he said, will take up soon
the matter off when- new bids will
be called. ::-.--'J'-
Fate of Confiscated
Merchandise Outlined . -
Merchandise prizes given in
connection with illegal punch
board operations, when confis
cated by officers, should be? sold
by the courts and the proceeds
turned over to the state, Attorney
General George Neuner ruled
Monday.
: The prizes could not be sold
until the illegal punchboard op
erators were convicted. .
Animal Crackers
y WARREN COODRiCH
ou i e 7 1 S3)
Tetiina. 1-2-1-4, woofT
quired for
courvDy tne same out jeneia
the 1940 Smith act conditional
thus opening the way for prose
cution of thousands of rank-and-file
communists. ' i f
Attorney General J. Howard Mc
Grath - indicated that plans for
such a red roundup may already
be in the works, Declaring this
"a bad day for the conspirators,"
McGrath said the justice depart
ment now can; '"proceed to give
additional! protection against
those who seek to overthrow the
government by! violence 1
For the 11 top leaders, today's
decision -almost certainly meant
prison terms beginning in about
30 days. , 1 I
Propertly Convicted f. f '
The high court, in a decision
written by Chief Justice Vinson,
ruled that they were . "properly
and constitutionally convictedf in
New York of conspiring; to teach
and advocate the overthrow of the
government by force and violence,
in violation of the Smith act. j .
The red leaders involved are
Eugene Dennis, general j secretary
of the U. S. communist party, iand
these other members of the so
called "American politburo": Ben
jamin J; Davis jr., Gilbert Green,
Robert G. Thompson,' John Gates,
John B. Williamson, Carl Winter,
Gus Hall, Jacob Stachel, Henry
Winston and Irving Potash.
. All but Thompson were sen
tenced in October, 1949, at the end
of their turbulent New York trial,
to five years in prison. Thompson
got a lighter sentence, three years,
in view -of his Pacific wkr service
in the U. S. army. Each: of the 11
was fined $10,000. t I
The court ruled 5 to 4 that cities
may compel their employes! to
take loyalty oaths as a protection
against subversion. j j
City Power Upheld T I
And the high court also upheld
the power of cities to outlaw an
old American tr,adition-i-doorto-door
peddling-f-to protect house
wives from invasion o privacy,
peace and quiet.
Salem does jnot, have an ordi
nance prohibiting dobr-to-door
peddling, such is was upheld Mon
day My the UiS. supreme court,
but provides for licensing of such
salesmen, City Attorney Chris
Kowitz pointed out. -1
He said the ordinance, adopted
about a year 3ago, increased the
difficulty of getting a license for
door-to-door selling, since it takes
about a week to process, requires
fingerprinting land recommenda
tions, but causes little trouble -for
Salem residents. : . I
Cohen Lavish j
Spender for j
Small Income I
LOS ANGELES, June 4-P)-G
ambler ' Mickey Cohen s was- pic
tured to a federal juryj today; as
a man who neglected td payin
come taxes but otherwise was a
lavish spender! 1 I I
U. S. Attorney Ernest? A. Tolin,
opening the government'! tax eva
sion case against Cohen, said it
seemed "he must have started but
down Wilshirel boulevard in this
Cadillac, spending money, with
both hand." - j
' Cohen is charged with cheating
the government of $156,123.48:- in
income taxes fbr 1946, 1947, and
1348. jus wiie, Lavonner also is a
defendant because she signed their
joint returns, j f
i The U. S., attorney said Cohen
paid $3 for an icepick and $17.25
for a corkscref , Referring . to :$his
income tax reports, the? prosecu
tor said Cohen lived lavishly oh a
peanut vendor's income." He said,
for instance, that n 1948 Cohen
reported inconier of ; $26,295 but
spent $97,000. I i
Tolin ; began fhis opening state
ment, outlining! what the govern
ment will attempt to prove, after
a jury of seven women! and five
men was chosen in -just an hour
and a half. j ' ,l - . ? -' t
The first wifeless,- stock broker
William Fleming, said Cohen made
$6,616.98 profit in .one I week? in
August ,1947 on some gold mine
stock, t ... ;
Reds Defend 1
'I ron Tirianstfe!
' C . f ,
TOKYO, Tuesday, June MV
Allied troops beat off nine red
counterattacks londay and mov
ed their twistiag Jjattle l line One
miles deeper into 'communist Ko
rea. -'..'..- ; I
A U. S. eighth army Staff offi
cer said today! the Chinese and
Korean reds wjtre righting hard
est in defense j of Chorwon - and
Kumhwa anchors of an assembly
""iron trianele. i ; ? ; . : f
One of the red counterattacks
was repulsed JO miles souUt'cf
Chorwon.-;. h-' ' ,1 r
In Washington, Maj. Gen. Max-8
well D. Taylor, operations chief
of the army department, disclosed
that the hard-hitting eighth amy
is at full combat strength for the
first time in, the war. (
KOUSSEYITSIr CHS t
BOSTON ; Jane 4 -1&) - Serge
Koussevitsky, 77, conductor -emeritus,
ef the Boston Symphony or
chestra, died tonight at ! the New
England Medical center after a
short illness. I : -
101st YEAR
Salem Automobile
Accident ( Fatal
- " One young woman was killed
and another injured early this
; morning as the ear in which
they and two other persons were
riding overturned at the corner'
of 25th and Mission streets.
Lucille Penrod, 17, 745 Trade
St., died almost instantly as the
ear went out of control on Mis
sion street, coming toward Sa
lem, , and rolled, throwing out
three of Its occupants. Mrs. Pa
tricia L. Thomas, 20, 840 Trade
at was taken to Salem Memor
ial hospital with undetermined
injuries. : v
The other occupants of the
car, who were not injured, were
Arnold E. Overman, jr 1761
S. Liberty' st. and Joe Jamison,
Salem. The accident occurred
shortly after 1 a.m.
Negotiation
PossiMities in
Iran Improve
TEHRAN, Iran, June 4-WVThe
chances for amicable negotiations
in Iran's explosive oil dispute with
Britain were better today despite
a strange mixup in President Tru
man's letters to the premiers of
the two nations.
There were strong indications
that Premier Mohammed Mossa
degh was pleased to get the prom
ise yesterday from the British-
owned Anglo-Iranian Oil company
(AIOC) to send a delegation from
London to undertake "full and
frank discussions."
One reason, it was reported, is
that the premier is worried over
Iran's finances, since his oil royal
ties from the billion dollar com
pany have been cut off. He has
declined to discuss the question of
receiving advance payments on
prospective profits because that
would imply the continued exist
ence of AIOC, a company which
the nationalization law declares is
abolished.
Policeman Kills
Man as School
NEW YORK, June 4 (TP) A
stunned group of lightly clad high
school girls today watched a mo
torcycle policeman shoot and kill
a man who had invaded their phy
sical education class. I
-Police said the victim, Carl
Arch, 50, entered the class and
wandered among the girls, talking
incoherently and tapping them on
a shoulder as he waved a coral
colored vase in one hand and a
fountain pen in the other.
The shooting was in the gymna
sium of Central Commercial high
school, in midtown Manhattan.
Motorcycle Patrolman Eugene
Grace, summoped to the school
by a student, said he fired one
shot after Arch struck him with
the base. The jbullet struck Arch
in the jaw. . -
- About 35 girls, clad in - gym
shorts, and their teacher, Mrs.
Elizabeth Downs, saw, the killing.
Grace said Arch struck him
and lunged at him with what he
thought was a knife
Constitution Wins
Puerto Rico Vote
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, June
4 CP) Puerto Ricans voted four-to-one
today for a constitution
of their own, returns from al
most half the polling districts
indicated tonight.
The referendum was held to
determine whether the island's
basic law should be set forth in
a constitution instead of the
organic act passed by the
. United States congress. ; , '
If the proposal wins, the draft
of a constitution would need the
approval of President Truman
and the U. S. congress.
SALEM PRECIPITATION
Since Start of Weather Year Sept. 1
This Year Last Year Normal
49.7S 1 - 40. 8S 33.S4
Glass Watches
Colorado Escapee Caught in -Salem
After 6 'Straight' Years
A convict, who apparently had
"gone straight" for six years since
he escaped from Colorado state
prison, was arrested in Salem
Monday : by Marion county Sher
iff Denver Young and deputies.:
- Sheriff Young " identified - the
man. as Edward Robert Cain, 50,
who escaped the prison on Sept.
30 1945, where he had been serv
ing a 50-year sentence for second
.degree murder. '
. Cain, told Young he had come
to Salem, shortly after his escape,
later going to Portland where he
operated a machine shop before
returning to Salem in 849. For tne
past two years Cain , has worked
as a mechanic at Paulus Brothers
cannery. He lived alone at IS 37
Broadway st.
Cain's record goes back, to 1319
when be was arrested for car
theft la New Mexico, Sheriff
Young reported. He was sentenc
The
Ceiling Price
Lists on Beef
Due June 18
WASHINGTON, June 4 -MP)-Price
Director Michael V. DiSalle
said today he plans to put in a
community-by-community pricin?
program on 15 ar 20 food items
within 20 days. The program will
follow the pattern of the wartime
Office of Price Administration
(OPA). i L
iNo rationing of any of the
items, which will be processed
foods, is contemplated in the pro
gram, DiSalle said. , j.
The pricing program will take
into effect the relative nearness
of a community to the source of
processed foods. j
Each local district of the Office
of Price Stabilization will make
up a local list of food prices based
on a percentage markup permit
ted under national OPS regula
tions. , ; - I -No
Hints Given 1
DiSalle gave no hint as to the
items to which this type of com
munity - by - community pricing
will apply. j
He outlined his program to the
United labor policy committee, an
organization of labor union lead
ers formed to coordinate iheir ac
tivities in connection with th
stabilization program and in other
fields.
The group has been critical of
price controls on the ground they
have failed to check inflation, j
Prices to Vary l
The government official said
prices would have to vary by com
munities across the country be
cause products could be obtained
cheaper in some areas than in
others. I
That was the way OPA control
led prices during World War II,
instead of having a nation-wide
ceiling. i
. DiSalle told newsmen that ceil
ing prices on beef wilt be listed
in butcher shops beginning June
18 as the first move in his figh.
to hold down food costs. He rote
that food makes up at least 34
per cent of the family budget in
the federal cost-of-living Index.
DiSalle indicated that veal
would be another of he meat
items to be placed under ceiling
lists, but said pork is now selling
below parity prices. U
Under the 1950 defense produc
tion act, farm products are ex
empt from ceilings if they are
selling below parity or below pre
Korean war levels.
: DiSalle told reporters that the
cost of living is "pretty close to
being stabilized right now."
Russian ?IF
Dims Chance
Of Big 4 Talk
1 LONDON, June 4-(ff)-In an
other 12 months Russia will be
able to put more than 30,000 war
planes in the air, a royal air force
Review estimated today. . 7
The Russians now have about
19,000 planes, about half of them
fighters, said the officail publica
tion. ' ' . ''
The Review said Russian con
struction efforts are being con
centrated on the MIG-15, the jet
fighter tried out in Korea, a
speedier jet fighter, the LavochkJn
17, and a twin-jet bomber.
"The MIG-15 becomes a back
number with the recent advent of
the Lavochkin, a tube-like, single
engined fighter,": he publication
said. , , 'v ; -
The new bomber is said to be
patterned after the Canberra, a
600 - mile - an - hour light bomber
which the British air force is put
ting into service soon. ;
ed to Folsom prison "for- robbery
in-1922; escaped the county jail at
Corpus Christi, Tex in 1928; and
served in Idaho state prison from
1937" to ,1943 for robbery. He
escaped 'once from the Boise pris
on and wai recaptured, 'Young
said.: J
The murder charge" grew out a
rooming house fight m which &
man was fatally wounded at Grand
Junction, Colo, in 1944, Cain told.;
Young, lie was sentenced to a 50
year term on the charge the same
Young said the arrest Was made
at the cannery about 3:30 p.m.
after officers had received a tip"
on Cain. , w v
Cain signed' a waiver of extra
dition Monday night in district
court whe he was arraigned on a
complaint charging him with be
ing a fugitive from justice. ;
14 PAGES
. . pounddd, 1651 -
' .... . . .- -. ... '
Oraxjoa Statesman Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, June 5, 1951
Msg
mm
J
Four Generations, and Evenly Spaced
-raoV!,. i.tMt. nS jV vifrvv
There are quite a few fonr-reneraUon families, bat net many in which all four are spaced just 20 years
apart One such family is pictured above. At the left is Mrs. Fred Sievers (1909), route 1, box 35,
Salem. Next is her mother, Mrs. Jack Thornton (18S9), Wallace, Idaho, and at the right is Mrs.
Sievers' daughter, Mrs. Doyle Leming (1929), 1148 N. Commercial st, Salem. The baby is Jeanne
Lynn Leming (1949). The Sievers came from Wallace, Idaho, five fears ago; (Statesman-McEwaa
. photo.) ' .
Sen. Butler's
Campaign Chief
Fined$5000
BALTIMORE, ''June 4-P)-Vio-lating
Maryland election laws cost
Jon M. Jonkel, 35-year-old for
mer Chicago public relations man,
$5,000 in fines today. -
Jonkel got' $1,250 a month for
acting as campaign manager for
Sen. Butler (R-Md) during the
1950 primary and general elec
tions. Jonkel entered guilty pleas to
six counts charging him with vio
lating the Maryland election laws
by: . ; .-. , r
. 1. Acting as Butler's political
agent -vflthout having been for
mally designated as such and with
out being a citizen or resident of
the 'state.- : ; : 4 -;
2. Failing to file a detailed re
port of campaign receipts and ex
penditures as required.
3." Failing to keep proper books
and records of financial matters.
Each charge was doubled, one
for the primary and one for, the
general election. - -
Crimihal Court . Judge Joseph
Sherbow said he would take into
consideration, the background and
record of Jonkel, and would not
impose any prison sentence. Jon
kel could have drawn a maximum
of eight years' in jail and $6,000 in
fines. ... ' tJ $ .
The indictments against Jonkel
grew out of a senate subcommittee
hearing on complaints by former
democratic senator Millard E. Tyd
ings that Butler's campaign funds
were handled irregularly and that
the republicans used funfair tac
tics,", including a composite pho
tograph. McKay UrgesJ
Early Action on
Mall Extension
Earl action toward "extension of
the Capitol Mall" from Chemeketa
to Center street will be urged by
Go. Douglas McKay at the next
meeting of the state board of, con
trol, he said Monday.; " . "
The extension is in " line "with
the proposed , expansion .of , the
state capitol area here. ; " - ;
.. The last legislature appropriat
ed $250,000 for the purchase of
property between Capitol '"and
Winter streets and Court and' D
streets for, extension f -the '.Mall
but this will be insufficient for
the entire1 proposed Mall exten
sion program; i 1 r' ? :
"Appraisals of, property required
for the extension are aov in prog-
- Governor. McKay ; emphaslzed
that the" state would not" pay in
flationary prices tdi the. property.
While the board of control and
the -legislature were in agree
ment on the general over-all plan
advanced by the state capitol plan
ning commission, they took issue
on several points. The board re
jected proposed closure of Che
meketa street and substitution of
Winter street for Summer street
for one-way southbound traffic.
W
4-Lane E-Sighway North
Of Salem, Said j (Distant
Construction of a four-lane highway- all the'way from Salem to
New Era is at least two or three years away from beginning, and a
delay in selling new highway bonds could postpone it further, State
Highway Engineer R. H. Baldock asserted Monday. ' ,
Baldock said a survey -from the Hayesville school, five miles north
of Salem, to the junction of the Pacific and Tualatin highways, has
Deen approved but tms work will
require more than a year. This
would be followed by purchase of
right-of-way before construction
operations could begin. .
The state highway engineer also
stressed that delay in selling the
$42,000,000 of highway bonds ap
proved by the last legislature
might retard the four-lane project
indefinitely. Charles E. Wilson,
U. S. defense ' mobilization head,
recently - requested that states,
counties and cities desiring to bor
row $1,000,000 or more obtain
government clearance.
Gov. Douglas McKay announced
Monday he. had written a letter
to Wilson urging that sale of the
Oregon highway bonds be permit
ted. The governor pointed out that
construction of Oregon roads was
essential to adequate defense and
there should, be no delay in actual
road building operations.
"I am of the opinion the gov
ernment will permit the sale of
these bonds when Washington of
ficials realize the necessity , for
more and better highways in Ore
gon in event of war," Governor
McKay sald.,., - ..........
Baldock said he might confer,
while in Washington next week,
with federal officials in connec
tion with the bond program, pro
vided such : action received . ap
proval of the state highway com
mission, t. ;
v "We are outlining our expanded
highway construction - .program,"
Baldock continued, "and it is im
portant that we determine whether
revenues from sale of the bonds
will be available."
" Virtually aU city and county of
ficials from Portland south to the
Californialine have gone on record
favoring a four-lane highway be
tween Salem and New Era. ,
Votes Defeat
School Budget-
- Statesman News Service. .
INDEPENDENCE, June 4--The
proposed budget for Monmouth
Independence school district 13-C
was defeated today by a vote of
283 to 265. Another vote will be
required, but Bev Walker, school
board chairman, said next step in
the "procedure was uncertain,
i Monmouth voted 172 to 101 'for
the . budget, ' while Independence
voted 182 to 83 against. '
It totaled $314,317.50 with' $63,-
843 of that amount over tne e
per cent limitation. The budget
would have been $38,000 over
that for ; the current year and
would have meant a tax increase
of some $20,000.
CANADA NAVT TO.GSOW .
- QUEBEC, June 4 -CSV Defense
Minister Brooke Claxton tonight
announced that 12 sew ships, in
addition to orders already placed,
will be built for the Royal Canadi
an navy at a cost of $60,000,000.
PRICE 5c
ufe
A
i
Aclieson Denies
Red Taint on
China Policy
WASHINGTON, June 4 Wy
Secretary of State Acheson denied
today there . ever has - been any
taint5 of communist influence in
deciding United States policy to
ward China. f- -
The .. secretary, told -senators
studying the. ouster of Gen: Doug
las MacArthur .this was .true to
day as . well as in . the . past. He
said: : . '."... . i .
"I , do f not believe there; w as or
is any communist, influence- any
way affecting the determination of
Chinese policy, ' either then ; or
now.";
Acheson said he knows of no
Chinese forces either n Formosa
or - on - the mainland strong
enough to overthrow, the red re
gime in China. --
Acheson also said that to extend
the Koren j war to Chinese soil
would give - the Russians a legal
right to intervene in the fighting;
they have r treaty "obligations to
Red China. ; - - -V ' -"
Acheson upheld the Yalta agree
ment by "which "Russia agreed , to
enter! the ..war against Japan in
return for concessions, in Asia. ;
Acheson gave this defense:
1) At the time of the Yalta
meeting, the U, S. didn't know, it
held the key . to an, atomic bomb,
the weapon which forced Japan's
surrender, . without anxinvasion.
The first. A-bomb was not ex
ploded at Los Alamos,. N. M until
July, 1945 six. months -alter-the
alta meeting. '
2) Japan then had 700,000
troops in Manchuria and 'another
1,223,000 in China which allied
military men feared would return
to Japan to bolster the home de
fenses against' ? the planed invas
ion. .. , ;, ; '.J.'- ,
3) The allies feared 'that the
real danger lay -In Russia waiting
for an end to -the war !until wo
had expended our effort and blood
to win the war and they would
come in and do what they wished.?
t , .
ASMT RACE FIGHT -. . J
! HEIDELBERG, Germany, June
t-iJP-VS. army officials said "to
day -they are "stnr investigating
battle involving 100 5 white and
colored soldiers in a Karlsruhe
cafe last May 9. The officials said
they have been unable as yet to
determine exactly what started the
melee, in which nine soldiers were
injured. :
CSXDCIS GETS DEADLINE
SAN FRANCISCO," June 4-
iX)ngsnore leaaer iiarry . images
tod ay was riven until Julr 18 to
submit an opening brief la fcia
appeal .from his perjuryconric-
V7eathcr
Balem '
Portland
San i"rancico
Chics ?o :
Kew York
tt
- ffri
ta m ,
45 JbO -
49 JBO .
ts
6i
5
63 J -
, Willamett river -1 foot.
. : FORECAST (irom V. S. Wstbr fc
resu. McNary field, Salem): Most; t
cloudy with Mattered sbowera thiJ
morning. Partial clearing this after
noon and becoming cloudy taaigha,
High today near 68: low near 43.
Ho. 73
Wars' flare j
In Baltimore, j
Newark, Omaha
NEW YORIC June 4-P-Bar-gain
hunters renewed their as
sault on New York City's depart
ment stores today as a spreading
price war gathered momentum.
Other cities got into the act.
Cash registers jingled a merry
tune. New York department stores
noted that the 3 first four days of
the price war- had boosted last
week's sales close to recent scare
buying levels. ;
Sales for the week ended June 1
wede up" 25 per cent over the same
week a year ago, a federal reserve
bank survey showed. ' ; j
By contrast,! Philadelphia de
partment stores showed a marked
drop. Some merchants theorized
Philadelphia shoppers were hold
ing back, waiting for a price war
to break out iri that ritv t
- Brand new price wars flared In
Bauimore, Md.; Newark, NJ, and
Omaha, Neb. ; . . . s
Items Replaced; I
New items appeared on bargain
counters in New York, some as
replacements for cut-rate mer
chandise whichihad been sold out
in last week's scramble. New price
cuts went into effect Prices of
some items fell: progressively -dur- )
ing the day as merchants strovmw'
to meet competition. f ,
Two New York shoppers wer
severely cut when a crowd fight
ing to get into a Bronx store push
ed them through a plate glass
window. i
Macy's, which last week sold out
its $461.50" Sunbeam Mixmasters at
$29.64, switched to another nation
ally advertized; brand. A favorite
among bargain-seekers in the bitf
neraia square store today was tbm
Dormeyer mixer, price fixed at
546.50 and reduced to $28.67.
Shoppers with headaches bought
Bayer aspirin at the cut Tate prict
Of 17 cents A rilindrw1 faVilefa 4m
some yew Ymk gforeas-The fair
traded price is $9 cents. ? J
Freakish Aspects " '
The price war had Its freakish
asnects some mni'i ilt. nliw4
ing coat and pants, selling for less
than the Jacket alone. Macy's cut
the price of Its $27.50 Sir Prem
lightweights suftaJ to $li24. Thm
price of the Jacket sold separately "
was cut from $21 to 119.74 ho thai
Jacket alone Cost $4.50 more than
uie coat - ana - xrousr coridmn
Hnn Th mifr vkf a MlMaM4 tfU
m, w v. nuaw W1AS 'Mlfl
and as the dayl wore on only edJ
sizes could be , haL There ? w
plenty of suits at regular prices.'
For the ladies. MaeVe nffiAJSU
nylon sUps at $4.09 reduced frora-
roiaing oauy carnages sao
9 -by-12-foot rugs were added
the bargain list .When the stcrd
ran out of Toastmasters, H cffeieq
Westingthouse automatic . toasteri
in their. stead-Uat $ 13.11, reduce 1
from $22.83. Gimbel's sold RCA'f
wixu inviu AtMuig 9. y
tachment for, $824. Blooming Jslci
tied a $21.65 price tag to Its Z3X J
Coffeeihatic percolator. Abrahart
et Straus Knocked $20 on the pries
of Rezina floor nolisbers. fair fradJ
ed at $59.95. - ,
Firemen Offer
Eire Hazard
ion
InSDect
A free inspection of Tour hoxns)
td eliminate fife hazards., i
That is what the Salem fire
partment Is offering during 1.$
month of June as part of a naf
wide service to cut dwelling f ret
and pare the annual toll of Ls
caused deaths.: ' - ;
The inspection Is offered fret If
Salem firemen' to any household;
era who will invite hvpectors tn ---o
their home, : Chief W, P. Rct;4
announced Monday. ? j
; Principal aim of the month-let.';
campaign by the Internation Aa
sociationNiX Fire Chiefs is redur
tion of theannual loss t 4,CCi
child lives in the U. S. ; '
Chief Roble sali.the department
will be glad to make the
tion, point out; possible., causes cl
fire and " work- with householder 1
in elxminaung ;the hazards.
Western Isternailiaal
At Vaneouvee 4. TrlSty lr-
-At Victoria ? Wntcb a
, (Only games scheduled J,
" "" ' Coast Leagcsj
No games scheduled).
, - - National
At Brooklm-CMca go (rainl
- At New York z, t, Louis 7,
At Boston 1, dactafa'4 13
At Fhilaticlphla 4. Ptelargh 11
merieaa Les jrue
At Cleveland Bottoa t-a - -At
Clave' i4 8. New Yoik i
At tetroit S, WhUiton -AJ
fcv Louia S. rnUaaelpUa f
i!v'i.;l!,i.'- N
I).