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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1951)
O O Truman Gives . Soviet Peace' to Plan - WASHINGTON. Aug. 20 -6T"V-President Truman sent Russia's "Peace Resolution' to congress to day with a -warning that it fails - to guarantee "any change in hos tile and expansionist policies of the Soviet Union, which now threaten world peace. Sharply discounting the Soviet gesture, Mr. Truman outlined an eight-point program of things he said Russia should do if it really wants peace. . ; As evidence of good faith, the president said, the Soviet Union should; ; ' 1. Stop "flouting the authority" ef the United Nations. 2. Cease supporting armed ag gression in defiance of the United Nations. ; t. Help establish peace with Germany. Austria and Japan. 4, Refrain from employing force to maintain regimes in other coun tries which lack the support of their own people. No Distortion 6. Cease distorting the motives i and actions of other peoples and governments. 7. Stop violating human rights and liberties. .,. . . , 8. Join "in good faith In the earnest effort" to find means for reducing armaments and control ling atomic energy "in the interest of peace" . But Mr. Truman, told congress "Until ' we have concrete evi dence that the Soviet Union has in fact changed its policies, I can- i not advise the congress to change the policies of the United States.' Barbed Comments Mr. Truman made his barbed comments in a message accom panying the resolution adopted by the presidium of the upreme So viet and a letter from Soviet Pre- aident Nikolai M. Shvernik. The Soviet claim of peaceful In tentions came as a belated answer to a resolution passed by congress last June expressing the friend ship of the American people for all other; peoples, including the Russian, i Mr. ' Truman had sent the message to President Stiver nik with a request that it be made public to the Soviet people. In his message today. Mr. Tru man said the fact that it was pub lished was1 influenced by the fact that the state department's "Voice ci America" radio was continu ously broadcasting the text of the U. S. resolution and its existence "could no longer be concealed from the: peoples of the Soviet Union." : : In his message, Mr. Truman also took occasion to protest the recent house action in cutting $30,000,000 off the. $115,000,000 he had re - quested' for a "campaign of truth, - including the voice of America." Triunah Asks Congress for Flood Funds WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 -V President I Truman today asked congress for $400,000,000 to aid sufferers 4 of the flood-ravaged middle west and set up a system fo flood disaster insurance. ' - - White House aides said the re quest Was believed to be the big gest in the history of American (disaster relief. Mr. Truman urged congress to provide - the money "with the greatest possible speed" as an emergency measure. He said: physical damage from the flood waters in Kansas, Mis souri and nearby states had passed the billion-dollar mark, with loss of income amounting to about $1, 000,000,000 more. Congress has already appropri ated $25,000,000 to cope with the Immediate emergency, but Mr. Truman said 16 times that much is needed . to; help the midwest dig out of the mud-engulfing cities, farms, and factories. f,. . . r" IN PROTECTIVE CUSTODY Marea." Cepenhagea Zm klppopotanaa. cooeeals her ride under a doar ceamteaaaee as she laascbes her saeath-ld'ffsprina ia obUe society. f- . . - s v. : eze Artists Favorites at Circus to Be in City Thursday Trap Th Slcrtetmcn. Salaa. Orggoru Tnaadcrf Auqxct 21. 15513 Year in, year out, the girls and, men on the flying trapeze are fa vorites at circus spectators. There is ; something lyrical about : these soaring, v gliding, smooth-muscled beings; and the poetry of flight is more than a phrase when circus "Ciersr take to the air, circus lovers say. This season, there are 300 aer- lalists with the big Ringling Bros, and Barnum &c Bailey Circus. ,. : Outstanding i among them are the Flying Concellos, the Flying Artonys and the Comets, who are declared to perform every aerial maneuver known to trapeze aero nautics short of jet propulsion the twisting' double-somersaults, the "passing" tricks and the in credible triple three revolutions to the jackpot catch. And as a separate display in itself, there is a new mid-air ex travaganza with sixty girl aerial- is ts executing ; in forty-foot-high precision the leaps, turns and spins of I ballerinas. I This feature has been staged by Antoinette Concel lo, star of the famous Flying Con- cellos, i "The Greatest Show on Earth" is coming to Salem Thursday. Per formances in the new air-ventilated tent will be given at 2:15 and 8:15 pjxl, with . doors opening at 1 and 7. Foreign Aid Bill Delayed WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 -flPV-Senate committee action on the administration's $8,500,000,000 for eign aid program was delayed to day when not enough senators showed up for a meeting. Only five of the 26 members of the : senate foreign relations and armed services committees ap peared for a joint session this afternoon. The senate was meet ing! at the time. Chairman Connally. (D-Tex) postponed the committee session until Wednesday. Connally said that at a morning session of the committees Senator Lodge (R-Mass) had opposed any cut I in the $5,300,000,000 portion of the bill earmarked for military aid for Europe. THREE HICH AT FORTY M t L E S Germaa averts Instructors traveling at 40 mQea aa bear en water skis succeed In creating siz-persoa water pyramid en the Efl Sea near Munich. Car-Bus Crash Leaves Four Persons Hurt Four persons were Injured, none seriously, in an auto-bus collision at Market and North ' Church . streets Monday, city police reported.-:. -, ; :W'S Injured 1 were MrsJ Jo Ann Smith, 4983 Rickman rd. with fractured nose, teeth knocked out and bruises; PhUJip Smith, her husband, bruises; Maude E. Wil son, 590 Union sL, bruises, and Marsha Morris. 3, of 3590 S. Com mercial st, bruises, police said. . Mr. and Mrs. Smith were driver and passenger in the 'auto. The other were passengers on the City Transit lines bus. Driver of the bus was listed as Cecil Homer Walker, 2238 Trade st. Polka said the auto was traveling west on Market street and the bus was travelling north on Church street when they collided. Extensive damage to the front end of the auto, which was towed from the scene by a wrecker, was reported. The bus sustained dam age to the right rear, police said. No citations were issued. . f I Ill A I 'ft , ; . . ' '. . V :. .... ' v - : S. -.... . .v :w. .. . ' 1 ... . - ' '' ' ? DOCGY LIVING Snowball, a five-year-eld peeca waed by Frank J. Smith of Bartoaville. IIL. looks waichfally at greaa af tiny goslings ef which she has become "godmother." Assassin's 'Confession9 Claims Plot Aims to Kill off Hashemites By Zela Nagatl AMMAN; Jordan, Aug. The purported confession of one of the alleged conspirators read In court today declared "the assassination of King! Abdullah was the first phase of a plot aimed at eliminating the Hashe mites." -;.r. - V-. i: ; I --' The statement was I from Dr. Mousa 1 Husseini, at cousin of Haj Amin! El Husseini, exiled Mufti of Jerusalem jwho has waged a Ion g-standing feud with King Abdullah of the Hashemite family. ' : - - ---. ' Abdullah; and his royal cousins in neighboring Iraq long dreamed of a union of Jordan, Itaq, Syria, Lebanon and Palestine The Muf ti and the numerous" Husseini family were bitter rivals of Ab dullah for the rule of! Palestine. Mousa El Husseini Is on trial with nine other defendants for plotting and aiding in the sination of Abdullah on July,. 20 at the Mosque of Omar in Jor dan-held . old r J erusalem. ' X The statement was read at the third day of the trial before a three-man military court headed by Gen. Abdel Gader El Gundi, top Arab officer in the Arab Legion. . ' - : . It said El Husseini plotted with CoL Abdullah El Tel, former Arab Legion commander t who swept the walls of Old Jeru salem in the early fighting with the Jews of Israel and then broke with Abdullah and sought refuge in Cairo where the former Mufti is exiled. .. X. - However. 13 Husseini declared "I never approved the assassina tion of King Abdullah. -1 never was convinced of the wisdom of this crime. I was advocating on ly an attempt which might result In terrorizing the monarch." IS HUPTUIIE - ; CEiTOO WC2S2 EACH YEAS? - : Wear a DOBBS TRUSS CULELESS LH-TLESS STAFLS3 t?PJlincu'T rrrrcDNO obugations " Ilea, tTotaea, Cbildrea " Hm asatter what truss roa aow wear, roa Talk Tonight OnVetBb nus H.C. (Hub) Saalfeld. supervis or or the state veterans bonus di vision of the state department of veterans affairs, will speak at 8 o'clock tonight at the Veterans of Foreign Wars halL Hood and Church streets. Saalfeld will explain the gen eral provisions of the bonus law. The meeting is open to the public ana is sponsored by Marion post 661 of the VFW. A question and answer session will follow the SPECIALIZED invnSTMECJT nnrjAGcncnT gervice Today's economic situation ' makes it more important than ever before that op-to-the-mkiute knowledge of busi ness conditions be applied to the management of invest .. ments. . - - j The Investment Manage ment services of the First National Bank offer yoo the group judgment of invest ment specialists at low cose Full or limited management services are available. Yi are invited to make an appointment to discuss v Investment Management at your convenience with an officer of our Trust Depart ment. Your appointment may be arranged through any .' First National banking oce. Mt a . CS . - yfs- SA1LM CAKCII : I FIQG7 r:ATic::i .. . .. N r V - - h '. f 1 ' - Perfeetlv timed mld.alr eatch bv i two of the Fivuir Artonv 'ith i toe Die KUunt oros. ua or ! Bum A Bailey Circus. "THE NAME" SINGAPORE (TV- They called him "The Name" aboard the French liner "Andre Lebon." That was because Monsier Mougamma doucossoumarecar usually couldn't find space enough to write his name on chits. A French Indian businessman, he was among pas sengers from Saigon bound for France when the vessel arrived here recently. CamblingRoom ,y, ByExpIosidn LYNWOQD. Caif Aug. 20 -Vfl Federal 'agents today joined; in an Invesugauon of an accidental ex plosion which, police believe, may have uncovered the storehouse of a large gambling syndicate, I TLr bust was touched off this morning in a .nod est two; story home when one of its occupants. Mrs. Eloise Collum, lit a cigaret in a gas-filled bathroom. i . During an investigation into the blast, police said j they discovered more than 100 slot machines, un assembled roulette tables, cartons of punchboards, and 1.000 rounds of pistol j ammunition . hidden in the cellar. I The explosion blew out the win dows, knocked the plaster off the walls, and I sent Mrs. Collum, 42, to the hospital with serious burns. " ! ! . HEXSLER CONFIRMED W SHINGTON. Aug. 20 iHtfV The senate today confirmed the nomination of Kenneth G. Heisler of Washington state as a member of the Federal Home Loan: bank boarc' for a term lending June 30, 1853. He succeeds Oscar K. La- roque, who resigned. Ulness Fatal To Daisy Ulen. Of Rickreall ' IUtnu Nwt Sorvtce , DALLAS Daisy Irene Ulen, . Rickreall resident: for !two years. died Sunday after long Illness, Funeral services will be held at ' 10 a., m. Thursday at Lincoln Memorial mausoleum,' Portland, under direction of Poll man funoral home, Dallas. The Rev Earl Ben- oow win o innate. Burial will be at Lincoln Memorial cemetery. Sh was born Mav 29. 1872 Canemah, Ore., and was married tepi. 29, iosz. to naminon dwara Ulen, who preceded her In death. She had lived ia Portland from 1928 to 1949. j Survivors Include a daughter. Anna Ulen Bell. Rickreall, and granddaughters, Kathleen L. BelL and Mary E. 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