tTho Stnrtosmrrn. Salem; Oregon. Friday, Angus 17, 1S51 10-Year-Old Boy Stranded ('-. ltKf iHifle But NoFamOy Br OuuU TMlk VICKSBURG, Mi-, Aug. ' Be knew when be fell asleep they were going to leave him. They bad told him so. i ' 5 And the fiddle was his to begin with. Be got it In a trade for his best friend, a bob-tailed pop. He found the fiddle by his bed when he awakened. Bis-daddy and stepmother had taken everything else from the room where they apent the previous night, That's the story a 10-year-old boy told LL EL D. Delaney of the Salvation Army here. Be sobbed it out after a Vkksburg businessman found him tn tears, attempting to sell the fiddle for enough money to buy a meal and a place to sleep. Father, Bad Reported , J i The police had a report on him. Before he left town Monday after noon the father notified police headquarters that the boy had run away and that be had stolen the violin.: The I cops were on the - watch Monday. They were skeptical. It was unusual for a man to lose his son and move on to another town s without searching for him. Utah Convicts Threaten New Pen Violence POINT-Or - TBI - MOUNTAIN, Utah, Aug. IMAVBoastfu! threats of renewed violence were voiced today by ringleaders of Tuesday's Utah state prison riot Authorities moved to make the "escape proof prison riot proof. The next time someone may be killed.- Convict Al win Strauss warned Clarence Dent, chief pris on clerk. Wayne Johnston, Strauss' cohort in Tuesday's flareup at the strife-bedeviled prison, said the Same warning was given to acting warden Weston H. Haslem.; Strauss and Johnston were tak en to Salt Lake City today for arraignment on charges of being . habitual criminals, and second charges of assault on prison per sonnel and attempted escape. Later they , issued a "statement" to a re- porter for the Salt Lake Telegram, Roy' Robinson, somewhat recanting their more violent frame of mind. v Meanwhile, the state board of corrections voted to ask the state for funds to construct prison se curity features included in origin al prison plans. These were drop ped during construction at the in- . aistence of former Warden O. A. Severson. Raymond Ashton, architect; told the board that deletions in secur- ; ity structures, particularly far guards, saved about $100,000. He said it would cost more than that to build them now. Stay ton Crash Injures Woman Staieaamaa Maws Sarrka ' WEST STAYTON," Aug. 18 Mrs. Raymond . Bradshaw, tem porarily residing at Aumsville. re ceived4 minor injuries in an auto accident at about 10:15 o'clock to night Just west of Stayton on the West Stayton highway. Investigating Marion county deputy sheriffs said that the auto driven "by Mr. Bradshaw crashed Into the rear of a car driven by John L- Thomas of Snoddy Bean Farm near Stayton. The men were not injured. TEEMOV DRIES OIL WELLS ' LONG BEACH, Calif, AugT lt (AVA survey today showed SO oil wells stopped producing after yes terday's earth tremor in the har bor area. The wells average about 60 barrels a day each. Earth shifts frequently break the raslrigs in side deep oil wells. 4" If I READY FOR ISIS C U T Jsha J. UcGsr. U. C Ctnir.' r.i an er ta Geraaay. hefts a hat eefere going t r!xt dsxteg ftiaU Tame ta Fraattart Kitary. Fast Learee. The ComnsUa, JSer sUesiag a god woeJ, tzxit tare lili, eae vUa kssts IzUzl. When; found. erring over the fiddle and trying to sell it for six dollars, the boy said his name was Jimmy. Bis father traveled, be said. Be was 10 years old but he bad never stayed in one place long enough to go to schooL i Mather la Beapital At the Salvation Army, home. the youngster told XX Delaney- bis mother is in Whitfield (the state mental hospital): that his father had married again. Be had a sis ter and brother to Gulfport and he wanted to go there. Jimmy ' sobbed protests when they suggested :ne return to his father. !. ' ; The Salvation Army officers were convinced. They called Gulf port. The boy's sister and brother offered to make a home for him and UL Delaney bought the bus ticket. .He left yesterday. i The fiddle? It is still here. Po lice are holding it for further in vestigation. Jimmy's last! name Is not im portant. He's Just a boy with a heart and a hope who has never had a home address. None, that is, until now. Seattle Murdei Suspect Quizzed SEATTLE, Aug. lMVAn convict and itinerant laborer ad mitted In a signed statement today he shared a hotel room and fought with Glen BelL Portland ' man whose mutilated body was found here July 4. j . i But the suspect, John T. Brown, 57, denied any knowledge of the slaying. He is charged with second degree murder. Brown said he had a pocket knife, when he entered the hotel room, but does not recall what became of It Red Suspects Rounded Up JAKARTA Indonesia, Aug. 19- fy-Mimuj police today arrested about -lpO communist suspects. In cluding 16 members of parliament Official sources" implied the group was plotting, with help from Red China, to overthrow Indonesia's middle-road government The lawmakers detained make up. most of. parliament's extreme left wing. Chinese newsmen, mer chants and teachers likewise fell into the net Some top Indonesian labor leaders were seized. Jakarta newspapers said several officials of the labor ministry were among them. 1 ; s , . - The arrests came after wave of strikes by red-led unions and a gunfight between security: forces and a band of 150 machine gunners wearing hammer and sickle arm bands Aug. 6 at the port city of Tandjong Priok. I UN Patrdls ProHe At Korea Fronts U. S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD QUARTERS, Korea, Friday, Aug. 17-WVAHied patrols punched sharply into red positions ton the central and eastern Korean war front Thursday,: but withdrew un der heavy fire. i Red resistance was toughest southwest of Kansong. near the east coast There the communists used machineguns, mortars and Russian - type self-propelled guns and 76 millimeter artillery.1 On the central front three brief but intense patrol clashes were reported north of Hwachon voir south of Kumsong. , FUEL BLAST KILLS TWO BATON ROUGE, La, Aug. 15- (AVxploding fuel storage tanks killed two Esso Standard Oil re finery workers; and injured 11 others in an early morning blast that shook the tenure city; today, f t ' EATING TO WIND craft aaake a trail af sails ta a Opium Trade ; Bid from China Made Public WASHINGTON, Aug. lMAV Congress heard today that Com munist China holda mora than enough opium to supply the whole world for a year, and tried to swap 15 tons of it for American cotton. The narcotics bureau objected and the deal fell through. A house appropriations subcom mittee got this and a good deal more official information on the illegal drug traffic in recent hear ings, the transcripts of which were made public today. Deputy nar cotics commissioner G. W. Cun ningham also told the lawmakers that: ' : . -; "Lucky" Luciano, former New York vice czar deported to Italy, is reported by federal agents to be "directly connected" with! the world narcotics traffic. ' Drug addition in the United States is rising at such a rate that the bureau needs 57 additional en forcement agents and $130,000 more for the purchase of evidence. Cunningham said he has Infor mation that Communist China pos sesses 500 tons of opium "more than enough to supply the whole world for a year." About a year and a half ago, he said, a Seattle broker, who later was killed in the Philippines, telephoned him asking lor a permit to import up to 30,000 pounds of Chinese opium. The narcotics official saidj he told the broker he wouldn't ,glve nun a permit; that the United States had no Intention of letting anyone bring in opium from Com munist China, and that no manu facturer would buy It anyway. Aid for India Recommended Americans must remember that the people of India are intelligent and friendly, should be treated as equals and that aid to India must be given with no strings attached. This was the jist of a talk given by Dr. Victor Sword to 60 persons at a lecture forum sponsored at the YMCA Thursday night by the Salem Fellowship of Reconcilia tion. Dr. Sword spent 22 years in India as a missionary. Commie Youth Quiet in Berlin BERLIN. Aug. lMAVCommun 1st youth leaders talked tough about a new assault on west Ber lin today, but never got around to action. - - - ; -: a- Slill smarting from last night's fracas, the red youth threatened throughout the day to mass thou sands of their "world festival" boys and girls for another propa ganda march Into the Americas, French and British sectors. ftluch-Convicted , Woman Arrested PORTLAND, Aug. 18 A woman police said had been con victed 57 times in 38 years was tlimw? ir fiHi Knr VnrV day to face a purse-stealing cnarge. . She was Identified bv nolle at Mrs. Thomasine Fitzharris, ; 64. xne woman, who took a - awing at newsmen as she got down from a train here, insisted her same was Helen Morgan. Police said she has used 20 or 40 um anri Is wanted bv the FRT anrl othr law enforcement agencies. She was arrested here on a department store. Police said she Jumped ban and fled to New York. - i . I Danes Every 1 y Saturday Night I jf Tcmmy ISzzish 1 f AndirU (I U WEST COAST HADLCIS j Aa Cear Tiess ra mil Teea. Jk Sat. Sve. Ar WARD Heeled ever aad wtaring. b terms tlaeal Oee-Deslga . ertliwester dartag Kaee Week ef Port Orf ord Boat Reported Missing SEATTLE,' Aug. 18 -OJV Coast guard headquarters in Seattle said tonight that a Port Orf ord. Ore, fishing boat has been unreported since noon yesterday. I The 22-foot vessel is owned and operated by Jess Richmond of Port Orf ord. Another - main was also aboard. All harbors in the area were checked but the results wete neg ative. , Portland Youth Admits Hit-Run - Iportland, Aug. ia-flv- James . Bork, 20, Portland, was booked today on a charge of negli gent homicide and hit-tun today after Donna King, 17, was killed oh the city's outskirts last night. The girl was one of two pedes trians killed in accidents. I : I Bork and bis father reported to Multnomah county police who has listed the death as a hit-run acci dent. - 1 George E. Hansen, 25. Portland. was charged by District Attorney Leonard Lindas of Clackamas county with negligent homicide after Fred F. Collett, 72, Downey. Calif, was killed on southeast 82nd avenue. Because of their high concentration per unit of energy height. fats satisfy hunger longer than ao many other foods. NEWLY AIR-CONDITIONED ml "Salem's Oiuy Bome- Owned Theatre" iNow Showing - Open f:iS iamo Lanza ann Blyth Beal life Featarctfe "FUN AT THE ZOO T Thur, Ann anUMe I South 25th Street Across from Airport Stiltiftis RtwJISI Ccitlii or rASULOos riATOtts cvte BESIia ST HITl ITti Hew Air-Yentilsted Tent, Twenty Degress Coder Thsa Eyst Before I Chelee reserved rraadstaad chair tickets; tad. a4mixsUa sod all tax atw avsJSaUe. I1M and lLt tei ETESTONS. -;.:.: -( ;. . (UEveserved seal Ccketa. AS. CLTS gLSS; CnnJgEN xu:Ai;ra on sals '-FRED 1U Naett LTherty Larchsaeet. N. T Tacat dab. RodnejjBeals At Beta Meet Rodney Beals. son of Mr. and Mrs. O. K. Beals,; left Salem this week to attend the national Beta Theta Phi conference at Fort Monroe, Va. i Beals is a pre-medical student and head of Willamette universi ty's Beta chapter. ! Be will stop in Chicago to meet Clifford Gregg, also a Willamette student, whose father is a national officer of Beta Theta Phi. j Beals also will stop in Pensacola. Fla, to see his brother, naval air cadet Donald Beals. NOW SHOWTNGI Opea g-Starta at Dusk! Carteea Carnival . . Kobert Byaa Claire Trevor ta "BEST OF THE v BADMEV -fAad - Stephaa McNally GailiXtissell la "ADi CADET sea ass fcaassV 5aWea3 EIGHT MOWI II JA!.lF0Vni VIC DAf.-.Oia I BIGHT NOWI I 4 i . m i i i iA - Coo tin bobs Daily! NOWI : X BIO ONES1 " mraaUArk Preston Faster ta .- Adveature Ce-Bit! J. Scott Smart aa IIOVI 2 Ace TredsJ - ;-:: " Ana Sethera -Geerre Bastereft fa ,"ZHXI I3F ZIOSQAN jjl J (2-7029 Young Service : School Seeker Hits Jackpot LOS ANGELES, Aug. 18-UV Nneteen-year-old Robert T.Lutz, Jr.,- believes in putting plenty of irons in the fire. Robert took an entrance exam ination for West Point a while back. And while he was awaiting the results, be filed out applica tions for other service achools. Months went by. Then Con gressman Morris Poulson advised Robert he bad appointed him to West Point. The day after be ar rived at the academy, he received a letter saying Congressman Don ald Jackson had named him to Annapolis. Subsequently be was ordered to report to the New London Coast Guard academy, then to the Cal ifornia Maritime academy at Val- lejo. Finally his draft board no tified him his number was up. Robert is sticking to West Point Leisure-Filled Retirement Loses Appeal MINNEAPOLIS -CSV- Only one American breadwinner in four really goes for the idea of retiring to a lire of complete leisure when he gets up around 85. Three out of four want to keep on working, or at least "do some thing useful in their retirement years, according to a survey of male policyholders by the North western Life Insurance Co. Of 3,000 men covered in the sur vey, only 24 per cent want a life of ease when they reach retire ment age. Most of those who se lected such a retirement were men now under 40. Thirty-nine per cent said they wanted to be finan cially able to cut their working hours and change to a lighter oc cupation after retirement. OH is known to lie under the Chinese provinces of Shensl and Szechwan. EJelFedffQDfll) OUR TRADE-IN cr B. E 0ocdszsh GLASSTEX Cxtrm ptmimt idtm swaa - r Cfaa mH fan f f kfc TRAVELOG sV W AkNaQy PDGG: V ' 3 pages f travel t&forsaatloa. plea ether kandv dataT6et one todar. If s arailaUs at ae charge. Wo Fate of Dams In Congress Up To Committee WASHINGTON. Anr -tSK- Th fate of three hit PaHfif iMa-thwt dam project appropriations will rest wxm a nonse-senile conier ence committee. : ; was named today. It includes five democrats ana lour western re publicans. ; - -v !,.,--;.. ' The projects were approved In the $838,56813 bill for flood con trol ana navigation works by the senate yesterday. The house had refused earlier to include them. - The disputed 4 terns are: The Dalles dam on the Columla river, 114,000,000; ice Harbor dam, on the Soaks i river in , MuflivMcni Washington; Albenl Falls dam, on A.B- W - V t-- me roa ureiue nver m northern Idaho. 110,000.000. i Amons! other Droieeta Included in the senate bill (with the amounts previously voted by the house in parenthesis): Oreron - Wathinrton . M rNir lock and dam, S42.900.000 ($38,- vw.wvj; jn uiu.es 1 14,000,000 (none), s ' ' . : . ' Oreecn Detroit reservoir llt- 97S-000. ($15,000,000): Lookout Point reservoir, including power arid Dexter re - regulating dam $16,000,000 ($13,000,000); Willam ette river, bank protection, $400, 000 ($10(M)00) For flood control pt""!"g (none in house version of bill). Oregon-Hills creek reservoir $200,000; Couger reservoir $75,000; Green Peter reservoir $75,000. Flies have been captured up to 12 miles away from the place where . they were .."tagged with radioactive material. Paiidisa Islands Swimming - Baatina' - Daaetng Playgreuad Eeaipment IDEAL FOB PICNICS IN NATURAL SURROUNDINGS t Miles Oat Oa Tuner Kaad ALLOWANCES IICVCU u . up to ALLOWANCE J FOR TOUR OLD DATTERX Battery Ansly T,Lvour bat- ttatfMeonda. .'I .;: 3- fl IC3 Co. Cczi:n2l Red China Sends 2 Priests Home ; &ONO KONO, Aug. 18 -CfV Two French Catholic priests were ordered deported from Red China after their trial on charges of "murdering IS.D03 children." com munist press reports said today. The charge of murdering chil dren Is common one against mis skmaries who have had a hand in administering orphanages tn Bed uuoi. .iney are neia responsible for every death occurring there for as far back as 23 years. Ofl Deadlock Still Unbroken TEHRAN, Irin, Ac. 1-4V Britain, - Iranian and American leaders attempted at: various con ferences todav ta break th lock In negotiation of an oil settle- mem. . 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