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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1952)
1 4The Statesman. Salem. Ori. MorseTerms TrumanBudget practical' -CHICAGO CF Sen. Morse (R-Ore.) said Tuesday night Presi dent Trutnan's proposed 85-billion dollar budget is impractical, un necessary and inflationary, la a speech prepared for deliv ery to the Chicago Council on For eign. Relations, Morse said the bud get "is impractical from many standpoints." Tirst," he said, "It cannot be peat economically during the next year. It will in and of itself pro duce waste and inefficiency in ad ministration. "Second, it is not needed as of now. Sure, I know that if the goods were available we could use 15-billion dollars worth, but they are not available. The attempt to spend that much money will only result in contracting for a lot of goods and services that will not serve any vitally needed purpose. Let us spend less but produce the most vitally needed goods such as planes and new atomic weapons. "Third, an 85-billion dollar bud get .will increase inflation pres sures." Morse, who often has voted with the administration, said Congress "should not approve a budget be yond 70 billions." He contended savings can be made in both the civilian and mili tary portions of the budget. He urged a "sound economic program as part of our foreign policy," emphasizing a "point four program based upon a line of cred it loaning policy. Tor many yearalo come it will be necessary to have an economic aid program to foreign countries to some extent," he said. "How- em, it should be granted on a project-to-project basis." Beer License Hearing Held Following a 45-minute hearing, Joe Marsh's application for a package beer license was taken under advisement Tuesday by Marion County Court. Marsh had applied for a license for his grocery store at Drake's Crossing on the Silver Falls High way. Fifteen of the persons at the hearing favored granting the li cense, while 10 were opposed. Pe titions which have been filed with the court in the matter showed 93 names favoring and 75 op posed. In 1949 New York and Texas were the only states in the United States that had more than 500 hospitals each. r i 1 1 1 v n i aim iJM . -- j See ffie IJ r iKS? JEs: reiB C'lXH niHJfjS PRICED SO lOIflS fr J "M"""1 LOWEST FUCED IN ITS HEIDI &X 1 mv frMt w StyWIa D Ua 2-Dee ttim fata sr Im ffcea ear cnpritlt mtml m Hi tCmtkmntimm ml iiid m mim mm trim Mlnafc-e 1 m mm ileaiify mt mmtmimU Wednesday, January 3. 1952 TT Reluctant s .r JL. x . f f HOLLYWOOD Calif, WIH Rog ers Jr., will play the leading role In the film biography of his father's life, bat would rather someone else, got the; job. "I never sourht the role," Will said, "and acting doesn't come easy to me." Be was pressed Into the role when other commitments by various actors chosen for the part and color camera assign ments for the studio forced an early start on the pictare. (AP Wlrephoto to the Statesman.) Death Claims Ex-Woodbiirn Auto Dealer A former Woodburn automo bile dealer, Don Grilley,' 45, died unexpectedly in Pendleton last week. Funeral services were held Saturday in Pendleton,; friends here reported. i Grilley was the son of the late Albert M. Grilley, former YMCA physical instructor and executive. He had been Umatilla; County representative of the America Automobile Association and was a clerk at a Pendleton hotel, where he was working at the time of his death. Grilley had also been Secretary of the Pendleton Chamber of Commerce and of the Round-Up. He is survived by his widow. a son and daughter, two sisters, and his mother. A ii Here are -the truly advanced automobiles for 1952 . . the only fine cars priced so low . . . and one ride will tell you what we mean by that We mean the only cars at or near their price bringing you the beauty of radiant, new Royal-Ton Styling with Fisher Body. We mean the only cars at or near their price offering such a wide and wonderful choice of colors with upholstery and trim, in harmonizing colors, in all De Luxe sedan and coupe models! Senators Q uery Dulles on an sues WASHINGTON Bi3dhrt Fn ter Dulles assurea Senators Tues day that fTapan, the only nation ever subjected to atomic attack. would have little chance or de sire to produce atomic weapons. The Japanese are fully aware of the horrors of atomic warfare, Dulles said, and would be eager to endorse a worldwide system of control over atomic weapons. Testifying before the. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Dul les also made these points: 1. 'Some Pacific nations have shown a "reluctance" to line up with the United States in a Pa cific counterpart of the North At lantic Alliance for the defense of Western Europe. ' Partly for that reasonand be cause of strategic problems no plans are being made now for a master Pacific Defense Pact. 2. Japan has agreed, in a bind ing exchange of notes with the United States, to make facilities available to United Nations forces in the event of trouble in the Japanese area. Dulles, Republican advisor to the State Department, gave his views as the Senate Committee continued hearings on the pro posed Japanese peace treaty and three separate" security pacts in volving the United States, Ja pan, the Philippines, Australia and New Zealand. Dulles is generally regarded as the chief architect of the Japa nese peace treaty, which 'is sub ject to Senate ratification. Senators questioned. Dulles closely on the possibility that Japan might set up an atomic program once her sovereignty has been restored. Plane Mishaps Widow Tacoma Woman Twice TACOMA (JP) - Mrs. Stanley Lankiewicz Jr., has lost two fly ing warrior husbands. Word that the body of husky, 230-pound Capt. Lankiewivz had been found near the scene of the B-17 crash in the Olympic moun tains stunned the widow Monday. "My first husband, she said, was a World War II bombardier who was killed in the South Pa cific." Mrs. Lankiewicz is the mother of three children. A fourth is ex pected in April. Lankiewicz was the navigator on the ill-fated B-17. Jap Treaty Is MORE PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLETS THAN Slain IS- i .... I f "" V: 5' SUEZ, Egypt Sister Anthony, 52, (above), American victim of the Anglo-Egyptian straggle over the Sues Canal area, was fatal ly shot outside Ismailla sector convent during battle between British troops and Egyptian na tionalists. The slain nan was the daughter of Samuel Timbers, of PeekskilL N.Y. (AP Wlrephoto to the Statesman.) Taft Favors Decentralized Farm Controls MONROE, Wis. (JPy-Sen. Taft said Tuesday that agriculture pro duction controls, when necessary. should be carried out by farmers themselves and not vested in Washington. "In an emergency it may be ab solutely necessary to impose pro duction controls, but When it is done, it ought to be kept as far away as possible from Washing ton and in the hands of the farm era themselves,"' Taft said in a political speech. A mild chorus or boos greeted Taft when he walked into the Chevrolet assembly plant at Janes ville earlier Tuesday. One workman declined an In troduction to the Republican pre sidential aspirant. Not for me, he said, turning his back, when a shop steward asked if he'd like to meet the Ohio senator. We mean the only cars at or near their price with Center poise Power . . '. giving almost unbelievable smoothness and free dom from vibration. Moreover, we mean that Chevrolet sup plies all these fine car advantages at substantial savings . . . for it's the lowest priced lint in Us field. Extra-gmoolh mowc!t&2S with New Automatic Choke for finest no-shift driving at lowest cost. (Combination of Power glide and 105-h.p. Valve-in-Head Engine optional on De Laze models at extra cost.) ANY OTHER CARI Tunisia Riots Boost Known Deaths to 28 TUNIS, Tunisia (iTVRioting at the Port of Sousse Tuesday boost ed to 28 the known death toll In a week of clashes between independence-seeking Nationalists and police of this French North Af rican Protectorate. ; Col. Norbert Durand, Arabic- speaking French military com mander of the Sousse region, and nine Tunisians fell at that city of 25,000 on the Gulf of Ham marhent 70 miles southeast4- bf Tunis. - ; French sources rave this ac count of the outburst: Durand tried to calm a crowd of demonstrators bent on attack ing the European quarter. He had almost succeeded when two re volver bullets dropped him to the ground. Tunisians then rushed on the Colonel with clubs. Police and troops fired. In Paris, the French National Assembly indorsed Premier Ed gar Faure's new cabinet by an unusually heavy vote within a few hours after the news ar rived. Faure won support for a mid dle of the road policy in Tunisia, 396 to 220. He said French of ficials will resume talks with Tunisian leaders with a view to granting them more home rule, but "there will be no abandon ment, no departure by France from Tunisia." Money Talks In Texas Court MIDLAND, Tex. (JP) A Latin American was in city court Mon day charged with drunkenness. "Do you speak English?" asked Judge Fred Hartman. "No savvy," the man replied. "Well, I think I'll fine you $150," said the judge. "No, judge, that's too much," the man protested. He pleaded guilty and was fined $20. A meteor from outer space be comes a meteorite by surviving the friction of passage through the earth's atmosphere and reaching the ground. - r . . PlERfRIIEYlpv , M ! I i A i ' 1 00 Perf ecFv ': 5 Cn) ' A ' ' 'I 45 Gauge, 30 Denier AMAZINGI Wonderful news for thrifty women! Color-keyed spring shades in street weight first quality nylon hose. Limited quantity, hurry! PENNEY'S MAIN FLOOR Blood Donation Challenge Issued By Air Reserve Looking ahead t6 the Feb. 4 visit of a Red Cross blood collec tion unit at the Organized Re serve Armory, they made it known to fellow reservists of oth er services that the Air Force ex pects to lead the groups in blood donated. The blood collection from 6 to 10 o'clock that Monday night is arranged for the special conven ience of Air Force, Army and Navy Reservists and National Guardsmen. Iran Refuses To Accredit British Envoy TEHRAN, Iran (P)-Iran Tues day slammed the door in the face of Robert Hankey, former pri vate secretary to British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, and re fused to accept him as Britain's ambassador. The rejection was announced on a 'national "patriotic" holiday called by nationalistic Moslems to celebrate another blow at the Brit ish the closing Monday of all nine British consulates in this country. Premier Mohammed Mossa degh's government was expected to use the latest anti-British ges ture as a propaganda weapon in the elections which began in Teh ran Tuesday and will continue Wednesday and Thursday. Tehran is choosing 12 of the 136 mem bers of the lower House of Par liament. Hankey was the first secretary of the British embassy here dur ing World War II. One source said the Iranian government wants a "real new comer" at the British embassy. But the government offered no reasons for the rejection in its brief note to the embassy. The turndown hy one country of the nomination for ambassador is unusual. MILK PRICE TO RISE EUGENE (JP) The price of milk is expected to increase here Feb. 1. Lane County milk producers said that because of higher feed costs they would boost the milk price a half-cent on that '"ay. Death Penalty m . Tacoma ase TACOMA UPr-A Superior Court jury decreed the death penalty Tuesday for Bill Smith Jr, 26- J ear-old Burlingame, Calif., car op. ; The Jury of seven women ' and five men convicted him of first degree murder for the 1948 killing of Noreen McNicholas. The -Jury deliberated about eight hours, i Defense Attorneys Earl D. Mann and Richard Hodge indicated they would probably appeal the ver dict. . . . The 17-year-old- girl was killed in a park outside Tacoma. The key state witness, Ella Mae Cooper, testified that she saw the killing. Smith, Noreen and Ella Mae were all students In a beauty school at the time. Smith denied the charge from the witness stand during the two week triaL - - Smith was charged with the slaying after being arrested -f In California. He was picked up after Miss Cooper became hysterical. on a visit to the paf k ' and blurted out a story of having seen Noreen killed there more than twoears earlier. . v ' PULPWOOD PRICE GAINS CORVALLIS (yPh Pulpwood made the only price gains noted In the Wilalmette Valley log mar ket in the last week. Oregon State College reported Tuesday. Prices as high as $36 a thousand for 32-foot-long logs were reported for pulpwood. Sawlog prices held ' at OPS ceilings. COME SEE THE New Silver Anniversary i Sonotone! S W. P. Dodf Z Certified Sonotone Consultant Z will be In Salem, 200A Livesly Bids., Thursday, January Mth, 9 AM. to S P.M. Please see Mr. Dodge for any Sonotone serv- Sice, batteries, or a free demon stration of our new Sonotone.' "977". SONOTONE OF PORTLAND 321 Failing Bldf ., Portland, Oregon NOCTURNE ... livaly wear with blacks and greys. Liecreea SUNGLOW . .. . bright sunshiny beige you wear ! with pastels and light tweeds. Ashland Majldr Offers to WoHc For Hign Bulger : ASHLAND (ffV-So&& Ashland' resident is going to gel Mi full day of hard work out of Mijtfor Phil IV Stansbury. - The mayor let hlmsr in for it as a means of boosting he March, of Dimes campaign here. Residents are bidding for the mayor's serv-' Th hila H11 h iwn1 IV( day afternoon or Saturday morn mg. . Three members of the State Un employment Compensation Com-, mission have been . appointed to committee assignments; .with th: Interstate Conference of. Employ-, ment Securitr Asencit. ' it wm reported here Tuesday; ; . T. Morris Dunne, chairman . of the UCC, is one of six members of the committee on Employment' Security , Objectives ' under , th chairmanship of S. Cromwell of the Maryland Agency .R, T. Baxter, supervisor of bene- AIM . MIV WW UVOUIUU IC1 here, represents this region on th committee of Interstate Benefit Payments. Ernest H. Leonetti of the employment offices: is a mem ber of a special committee o- oi iw vu juipujrcia uu twit ers. The committees are, slated t: meet several times prior to th (national convention in September fat Salt Lake City. t. no f? &ATIN IkUtMIALL worfwrk In 9vftcy $1C5 ltrvthbli ncGiichrisT,cn3 255 N. CommetdUd tinging taupe yo: UGCMeerf: On Committees COLORS: -vx'l'i i i McKAY CHEVROLET CO. 9mwmmmmmtmwfmmmmmwmmmmmmmmmmm..,, : 1 510 N Commercial Street Salem, Oregon I y I? f 1 " i