The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 21, 1951, Page 3, Image 3

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    He cam. to the United States
from Chile la 1840.
John PTBcyd, district director
of immigration, said Hauser had
overstayed the time alloted in his
visa permit. ;
Friends reported recently that
the Hausers had obtained visas
and planned to. fly to Santiago,
Chile, within ' the next three
weeks.
The Hausers were married last
year and moved to Spokane sev
eral months ago. They have an
Rep. fellsworth
Th. Stcrteemcm. - SalonC OroqoiC Thursdayy Tan. 21. 1 $5 1--3
c n
Hon of the nationalist govern
ment' ' ;
He labeled as ."absurd'! state
ments that the Central News agen
cy, owned by the nationalist gov
ernment, had spent approximately
$654,000,000 in three years , V in
fluence public opinion. j ,- '
Such a sum, he said, .'equals
many times the total amount ex
pended by all the news agencies
in America which operate on a
complete nationwide basis.
I
Prisoner Escapes . ;
From Isolation Ward ?
PORTLAND,1 June 20-ifpTho-mas
G. Montgomery, 34, a Multno
mah county prisoner, escaped to
day from the city isolation hosDi
tal, where he had been treated for
diphtheria. His year sentence for
petty larceny would have expired
in August t ; i
Slaps iitGliina
"T
I
Husband Told
To Leave U.S.
' . - r
SEATTLE, June 20 -4V The
Immigration service today served
notice on Hans Hauseri husband
of the former Virginia Hill of
n
n
WASHINGTON, J a n e 2HJPh
Rep. Ellsworth (R r; Ore) -today
compared ; the' proposed investiga
it
tion of the China' lobby with the
backfire technique use dto fight
forest fires.
This particular backfire, he said
in his weekly newsletter, is "set
for the purpose of slowing down
the big blaze of , public opinion
which is about to consume the ad
ministration people."
Saying he is not certain such a
lobby exists, Ellsworth added that
If it! does "it surely has been a
infant son.
Mrs. Hauser was a friend of the
late Bugsie Siegel, who was slain
by S gunmen in her Beverly Hills
home. She wasalso called to "tes
tify at Kefauver crime committee
hearings in New York early 'this
year.
life expectancy at birth in the
Uaited States is now above 67. al
most 30 years longer than It was
in 1850.
Kefauver crime committee fame,
to leave the country by Septem
ber 1 or be deported.!
It was the second time the for
mer Sun Valley ski instructor had
been invited out i i
A congressional bin introduced
by Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (ID
wash.) suspending a previously
Issued deportation order failed to
PaSS. if.:;
Hauser is a .native of Austria.
MISTAKEN IDENTITY
PENANGHJPHSheikh Tahir Ja
laludin, won acquittal on a charge
of trespassing into a Moslem mos
que by producing a certificate to
show he was a "kibluf A Ki
blut" is an expert specializing in
determining the facing of mos
ques towards Mecca. The mosque
caretaker then withdrew the
charge against the Malay defend
ant.: ; -. v
HIM
complete flop in its activities Judg
ing xrom ine present pitiful Condi
wwwt x-a
Virginians'
Lobby Inquiry
11 v 1
I easssss ,
ART OF A TO P I A R I ST Thousands of peraens visit Go Yearkk's yard at Fishing
Crek. N. J- each vear to aee atataea and models eUosed from privet avedces M the Urt
Suit Reveals
Superstitions
Of Ozark Area
ST. LOUIS, June 2(HVTesti-
mony on Ozark superstitions today
highlighted a walking preacher's
federal court damage suit
The Rev. Guy Howard of Bran
eon, Mo-, is seeking $320,000 from
'the Capitol Records Distributing
Co., on the grounds it "burlesqued"
him in the song "The Missouri
"Walkin Preacher with the Little
Book in his Hand.
- Mrs. May Kennedy McCord, a
newspaper woman from Spring
field, Mo., testified yesterday she
cave Mr. Howard the walking
Treacher title in 1933.
-She thought the song in question
damaged the preachers reputa
tioriT Under -questioning, she list-
ed some superstitions of Ozark
folk:
Some believe the cure for mal
aria is a jigger of whisky to which
three drops of cat's . blood . have
been added. To stop a tornado.
Ozark farmers sometimes stick a
knife in the ground with the blade
facing the cloud on the theory the
blade will cut the storm in two.
The hoot1 of an, owl need not
mean a sick person will die if you
ouickly throw salt on the fire.
Mrs. McCord, named Missouri's
Mother of the year in 1950, is re
garded as an authority to hill lore
Howard originally had sought
SIjOOO.OOO damages from three
recording companies. He settled
out of court with the other two,
however. . : j
leather Slows
Dry Land Crops
PORTLAND, June 20-(jiP)-Re-
cent dry weather has set back
dry land crops, but irrigated crops
have made good growth, the de
partment of agriculture reported
today? in its weekly crop report.
Both pastures and dry land crops
need rain, the report said. Some
showers ; are expected in eastern
and northwestern Oregon late this
week,' but the weather bureau
said none is in prospect for the
southwestern part of; the state.
Socialite to
Face Charge of
in f .;:.:'C
iter
Manslau2l
County School
Officials to
Meet Today
County school superintendent
of the state will open a two-day
session this morning in the state
library building, where they will
be addressed by Dr. Clarence
Hines, superintendent of schools
t Eugene.
Friday, the superintendents at
tending the annual conference will
move to the Capitol room of the
Senator hotel.
The conference will follow the
workshop pattern and will in
clude discussions of various phases
of county school operation. Weak
nesses disclosed by the Holy le
port will also be discussed.
New officers of the group wiir
be elected Friday. They will suc
ceed president, Ralph Jones, Hood
River county, vice president Lu
. cille Klinge, Lane county, and sec
retary-treasurer D. A. Emerson of
the state department of education.
Ranch Hands Win
Game Act Acquittal
14 Indictments Left
ENTERPRISE, Ore.. June 20-P)
Two more men from Red's horse
ranch won acquittal on game law
violation charges today.
, R. A. Higgins, Portland fireman
and a co-owner of- the ranch, and
Frank Brothers, ranch caretaker,
were found innocent by a circuit
court jury. The charge against
them was killing deer with fewer
than four antlers.
Two weeks ago Oral Bristow al
so was acquitted by a circuit court
Jury. The charge against him was
killing a deer without a tag.
There are 14 more indictments
pending against men connected
with the ranch, a resort on the
Miriam river.
Higgins will go on trial again
tomorrow, this time facing a char
ge of killing a doe.
SAN ! LUIS OBISPO, Calif,
June -20-JP-h. San Luis Obispo
grand jury of; 17 'men tonight in
dieted Mrs. Margaret G. Ryan,
41-year-old New; ;York socialite,
on a charge of manslaughter in
the death of Leonard D. Ray, jr.,
22-year-old navy ' veteran.
Ray was shot to death at Mrs.
Ryan's mountain estate near here
June 9 after Mrs. Ryan had or
dered him off the place.
The widows of Basil A. (Pat)
Ryan, late New York stock broker
and grandson f of Thomas Fortune
Ryan,; called authorities after the
shooting; and said she shot in self
defense, after Ray had threatened
her with; a cocked .22 caliber rifle
A Corner's iury last week re
turned a verdict of Junjustifiable
homicide" and the grand jury,
after two -days of hearings, found
that she j "did jwflf ully, ' unlawfully
and feloniously" i : shoot Ray to
death; I ' ; J : ;
MrS. Ryan was; accompanied to
court by her attorney, Jerry D
Geisler, famed Los Angeles crim
inal lawyer. She was freed on
$10,000 bail set by Superior Judge
Ray Lyon. f : i ' ,
Through Geisler, I Mrs. Ryan
said: ij : i ' : -
I have full confidence in the
peopleof Sah Luis 1 Obispo and
am sure that I will be cleared
when;: I have an open and fair
trial.? ; I . ii .
Earlier today a $227,000 damage
suit was filed against Mrs. Ryan
by Leonard D. Ray, sr," father
of the slain navy veteran.
The suit was filed on behalf
of Mary Rayj 16-year-old widow
of the veteran and I their eight-
months-old daughter,; Shirley.
Truman Forms
New Cold War
Strategy Board
WASHINGTON, June
President Truman created a spe
cial strategy board today to direct
he cold war against Russia and
her satellites.
He called it "the psychological
strategy board and appointed
Gordon Gray, president of the Uni
versity of North Carolina and for
mer secretary of the army, as di
rector at $16,000 a year.
In the language of the directive,
the board will be responsible for
the formulation and promulgation
. . of overall national psychologi
cal objectives, policies and pro
grams, and for the coordination
and evaluation of the national psy
chological effort."
This means answering Soviet
propaganda in the most effective
manner possible, and strengthen
ing the morale and solidarity of
the world forces opposed to Soviet
expansion.
Gray, who has obtained a leave
of absence from his university
post, is not a member of the board,
but will organize and direct a staff
in carrying out the board s work
Board members will be James
E. Webb, undersecretary of state;
Robert A. Lovett, deputy secretary
of defense, and Lt. Gen. Walter
Bedell Smith, director of the Cen
tral Intelligency agency. Smith has
been designated acting chairman.
In addition to the three principal
members, the board will be com
posed o fa representative of the
head of each department or agency
as may be determined by the
board. A representative of the joint
chiefs of staff will sit in as military
advisor.
New Role for
Reich Roads
FRANKFURT, Germany (JP
The I superhighways that Hitler
built to help .invade Germany's
neighbors are being j extended to
spur peacetime trane; ana travel.
The famed j Autobahn system is
to link up with the projected-30,
000-mile European highway net
work planned by the United Na
tions!! Lconomic commission.
Germany's I highway planners
say the Autobahns, j which point
like military : arrows at France,
Poland and Austria, yriil form the
central spokes of the new system.
Patterned after New Jersey's
highway system, Hitler's Auto
bahns are considered Europe's fin
est roads. They are four-lane
concrete highways with a 14-foot
strip separating the double lanes.
uiiies are oy-passea. mere are
no intersections. j
FOR THE RECORD I
SCOTTSBLUFF. Neb. JPi
N. Mathers. Gering, iNebr, bank
er, hadn't missed a I Rotary Club
meeting in 25 years. So when
Mathers became ill ! and had - to
be in a Scottsbluff hospital on
the meeting day, the club held the
final minutes of its regular meet
ing in the hospital room to keep
ine record intact.
Jet Flying Lab
Takes to Air
EDWARDS AIRFORCE BASE,
Calif., June 20-i!P)-The newest of
a series of jet flying laboratories.
the Bell X-5, was put through its
first flight test here today.
The air force said test pilot Jean
Ziegler, 31, in a 30-minute hop,
felt out the ship as a preliminary
for later speed trials.
The X-5 wa painted with white
enamel to aid visual traclang. As
it flew over Rogers dry lake at the
air force base, motion pictures were
taken by a flier following in an
other airplane.
Newly-designed wings, which
change their angle in the air, are
expected to give the jet powered
X-5 a greater top speed and slow
er landing speed than convention
types. Bell officials said.
The date of the planned speed
test was not released.
pown
EXCLUSIVE
C7.
SILVER
i - ....
. IS'-
. .- -
vy J 11 VJrtt 5 "C II in tr. ! - . m. m . ; f
L rf J I Jf fil I , II PI I 1 11. VA. - . i
PRICE SALE
WHILE THEY LAST
SALE
Qose Timing
Prevents Fine
PASADENA, Calif.-i!pr-Because
Ashod Yaghlegian was unknow
ingly a few minutes behind sched
ule in driving to work, a patrol
man let him off with a ticket after
a collision at an intersection.
Yaghlegian told officer James E.
Corrigan he drives the same route
at the same time every morning.
Every morning he passes the in
tersection with a yellow caution
blinker.
On the morning of his collision,
damage was slight, he entered the
intersection a few seconds after
6 a.m., the hour the signal switches
to day-time red and green opera
tion.' Yaghlegian didn't notice the
light had turned red. Corrigan did
not blame him.
ON
I7E IIEED 9 USED CLEAIIE0S
. ! : I now ;
VACUUII CLEAIIEU SEE VICE .
LAXE WESTPHAL " j j j DEE 7HITLOCX
2C3 Slalo , f nOGG CHOS. Pt:3 3-9K3
S ilver-PIated Hostess
SUGAR & : CREAMER SETS -
Famous R. B. Rodgers Quality
Sale $5.00 Set
Plus Fed. Tax
Ret.
9J0
SAB AD-
lory, 4p. I3; tin mteit
thi$ traj )ueffjr Mrrfcaofc
krtad Ira, crocitf dittt,
for cooii'n mm4 Hon fwt.
SMMM 85U1MDS3D8 SSHlfGOB EFWMJB
4
i
ONLY
i '
ALSO AMNY SILVER PLATED PIECES VALUES TO $12.50
0
mm
PLUS
FEDERAL TAX
50c
Week on Approved
Credit
j t - t
Yes, lovely Sterling Silver, and at a price
so low if s hard to believe! The gleaming
finish end rich beauty of each superb
: i ! i
piece comes only from fine, painstaking
craftsmanship. You'll be proud to own
and proud to give any of this' exquisite
: I j
sterling. Hurry In or mail the coupon
today while all Items are still available.
A) Silver-plated i Salt
& Pepper. 2 seta $5.00
B) Cat Glass Surar A
Creamer with sterlinr
base; per pair . . $3.00
i I
C) Individual Salt! &
Peppers. Set of S box
ed 5.o
E) Cigarette Urn! ind
Ash Tray set ! Per
set . . . .' . . ss.ee
G) Console Sticks ! 3
hirL. Weighted.! Per
pair . . . . . 15.00
H) Coaster Ash Trays
wsterllng rims; set of
4 ....... . 15.00
i
I) Cat (Glass Jam Jar.
Sterling cover and
spoon . j . . . 15.00
J) Child Cup . . 15.00
K) Hurricane Lamps
9?i hlf h. Weighted.
Each ...... 5.00
L) Salad Setlth
Sterlinr bandies; 2
pieees $5.00
M) Cut Glass Vase
wsterlinr base, H"
hlih. Weifhted . . $5.00
N) Ch,lld SeL Nylon
bristle brash; comb;
both with sterlinr
backs; set;. . . .15.10
I
LOVELY GIFTS FOR
JUNE BRIDES
Q limited number
of especially
' " ; ! ' '
rVorttftlfltl litnnAn
Mcuuutut IJaCSvCiieee
Qtoncj amazing
low price!
iilWp" l I II ill""!" . . v . 1
- '. LJTrf " I -"-y-2. uj' J s
t I 7 r V-'i"' r i
1 -(WSmf v; a til . ( A I
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jli.i nun' rtnr.i(ini m i i . j t
- J9CT-
" r'l
' - i " -
OPEN
FRIDAYS
: TIL 9 P.M. !
! , - f
Salem's Leading CrecEt Jewelers and Opticians
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