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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1952)
J 1 The . Statesman, Salem, Ore Gun Battle Kills Two Escaped Cons, Detective in New Yorlc City NEW -YORK VP) - Police trapped three bank robbing, escaped convicts early Sunday, killing two of them in a blazing sun battle tnat con tne me oz one aetecuve ana seriously wounaea anomer. The third desperado was captured unhurt. A hail of pistol and machine gun bullets ended the careers jf Wrror of two bad men from Harlan County, Kentucky, Joseph Nolen. North Marion County Fair Results Listed Statesman News Serrlc ' "WOODBURN Final results of Judging of junior livestock exhibi lons were announced Sunday by officials of the North Marion County Fair. . , First place 1 winners: IW1V1 ' r-v4M- Whites: Yaarlina sows. Gor( DarUnd, Salem; fat bogs. Dar Und. . Duroc-Jsrsey: Yearling wwi, Art Beetiey. suvenon; junwr uu, iw Hofstetuer. saiem; ia nogs, mm AnrlrM Wood burn. - Berkshire: Junior silts. Carl Ola- 11a. Donald. Hereford: Junior Gilts, fat hogs, senior gOU, all won by Andres. Hampshire: Senior and Junior fllta won by Jeanne McKinley ti cervaia. SHEEP Roraner. axed ewes. Pat Ahrens. Tur ner; yearling ewes. Susan Swearing en. Salem: ram iambi, and ewe lambs. Ml Ahrens. ' J Suffolk, aged ewes. John Nybakks, Hubbard: ram lambs. Carl GianeUa. Xonald; ewe lambs. Pan Blake. Don aid. Hamnshir. axed ewe, yearling ewea, run lambs and ewelambk. all won by Bob Banlck of Brooks. Linclon. aged lamb, Phyllis Nybakki of Hubbard; awe lambs, John Nybakka, Hubbard. - snroDsnir. yearling ewes ana www lambs, both won by Jeanne McKln ley of Gervais. CATTLB Hereford. Junior heifer calf, Johnny Weisz of Gervais: Aberdeen Angus. Yearling heifer. Merle McLaren of Au rora; Crossbred, yearling heifer, and senior heifer calf. Bob Dryden of Waadbum. Jerseys, yearling heifer. : Steward Bve. Silverton: senior heifer calf. Joe Davis. Wood bum. junior heifer calf, Annette Davis. Woodburn. Guernsey, yearling heiier, Kenneth Monnier, Woodburn: senior heifer calf. CherriQ Doty, saiem. "'- Hotstein. junior heifer calf, Don gtettler. Keizer: senior heifer calf, Karen Patterson. Salem. Ayreshire, junior heifer calf, Arnold ' Andres. Woodburn. Swine showmanship: Senior division, Art Beesley, Silverton; junior division. Joyce Mount, Keizer. SheeD showmanship: Senior division. Bob B snick. Brooks; junior division. Jerry Stafek. Salem. - 1 Dairy showmanship: Senior division. Kenneth Klopp. Woodhurn: junior ai vision. Steward Bye. Silverton. Beef showmanship: Aberdeen Angus, senior division. Merle McLaren, Au rora. . t - PARADE RESULTS Saturday's complete .parade results are as follows: Best costumed girl " 1. Mary Fran cis Ebster; X. Beth Paulson; 3. Susan gbner. Best costumed boy 1, Tommy MlUer; S, Johnny Conn ell: 3. Ronald Ahre. Best , costumed- couple 1. Georgia and Guy Eichsteadt; X. Ted toman ana raui wioiwonn; . trm Walling-and Mary Springer. Decorated wagons and doll buggies I girls 1, Darlena Miller; J. Sheila i workman:' 3. Janice Evans. Decorated wagons (boys) 1, Bilhe and Lydia , Armstrong; 2. Jody and Jimmie Green soger; 3. John and Pat Deagen. Decorated tricycles and scooters (boys) Danny Donahue. Decorated tricycles and scooters (girl) Marsha and Molly Barbour. Miscellaneous 11 years and young ; er: 1. Randy Pulley; 3. Gary and Linda timon.. Cheryl Jo Enos; 3. Harriett an Arsdale. . Decorated bicycles (girls) 1. Glen dona Schhnpf; 2, Linda Workman; 3. Sue , Workman. Decorated bicycles iboys) 1, Dale Baker; 3. Ronnie Junggren; 3. James Miller. ' High school float 1. St. Paul Union High School; X, Woodburn High SjchooL Decorated cars 1. Woodburn Mer chants Association: 2, Lacey's Mens Wear; X. Ole's Texaco Service. Kid's saddle horses 1. Joan Deagen: I. Lynn Higglnbotham; 3, Donna Vlck- "Tnirk floats 1. ButteviTl Tir In aurance Co.: X. C. H. Ahrens' Hard ware: 3. Livesav Lumber Yard. Commercial floats L Terminal lea . m Kioia storage; a, xurua x-jrc, . ivunn W. Smith. . Pension Union oacKS iixiegea Red Leader V SEATTLE (P) One of the men scooped up by the FBI as a Com munist Party leader, in the state was unanimously re-elected Sun day as President of the Washing ton Pension Union. - , William J. Pennockv free on : $10,000 bail, described his return to office as "a vote of confidence. ; His was the only name placed in ' nomination for the presidency at the Pension Union's 15th annual eovention. The 201 delegates and 18 alter nates from 17 counties and 43 lo cals also called for abolition of the FBI, repeal of the Smith Act under which Pennock is charged with advocating the overthrow of the government by force, and for passage of state initiative 184 which would repeal and liberalize the present welfare law. MONKS AT MONTE CASSLNO CASSINO, Italy tfpy-The monks of Monte Cassino moved back into their abbey Sunday for the first time since it became one of World War II's grimmest battlefields. Repairs of damage caused by Egnung in 1944 permuted them to return., r .-. . , SAN SHOP SPECIAL ' Monday. September 22 Talisy A La Eirg Mashed Potatoes. Col Caw. and Batter . "Vv , 5r Monday; September 22. 1852 1 26 and his brother, Ballard, 22. Captured was .Elmer Schuer, 21, of Chicago. " Police said Schuer admitted the three robbed a Bronx gun store last Monday of a dozen weapons and on the followirfgday looted a Bronx bank of 112,670 in a dar ing daylight holdup. Big Manhunt The desperadoes had been the object of one of the East's biggest modern day manhunts since they escaped Sept. 10 from the Lewis- burg, Pa, federal prison, where they were serving long terms tor bank robbery. .. . - - The three had stabbed and kid napped their way to freedom, ter rorizing tne Pennsylvania coun tryside on their flight to New York. They were surprised In a tryst with three women when police stormed their seventh floor apart ment in Upper Manhattan short ly aner miamgnt. One of the Nolen brothers, partly clad, and Schuer were in a bedroom with one of the women when police oro&e in. Used Machine Gut who ox ue aesperaaoes used a machine gun in the brief, terrible Dame. When the amok had cleared the Nolens lay dead on" the floor. Detectives Philip Lamonica, 45, and Nicholas Cotter were wound ed. Lamonica died a short time later. He had been shot three times in the chest 7 : Police said one of tha Nolen had been shot at least 50 times. The women, one of whom took cover under a bed with Schuer, emerged from the battle unin jured. The other two had hidden in a bathroom. oi ' i . . . oi-uuer was oooxea later on charges of homicide, felonious as sault and violation of the Sulli van law. or Mrs. Erickson Set Wednesday (Story Also on Page One) Funeral services for Lucille Erickson, 44-year-old acci dent victim who died Sunday morn ing in a Salem hospital, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Virgil T. Golden ChapeLT The Rev. H. W. Black will of ficiate and interment win be in Crescent Grove Cemetery at Beav erton. - Mrs. Erickson sustained fatal in juries when the car in which she was riding was struck from the rear by an unloaded cement truck. The impact threw her out of the car ana sne was trapped under neath. - - - A resident of Salem for tha. rt 10 years, her home was 1010 Park Ave. JFor the past few months she had been an attendant at the Ore gon state Hospital. Previously she has worked in a cannery. t She lived most of her life in Echo, Ore., where she was born Aug. 19, 1908. Before coming to Salem she lived a short time in Vancouver Wash. , - Surviving are a daughter. Miss Phyllis Erickson, 17, of Salem, and a son, uouglas Hardy, of New Haven, Conn.; a sister, Mrs. Vir ginia Brown of Aloha, Ore.; two uruuiers. iester Kelson of Toledo muu Aivin jMeison of Portland. Beer Minus Bad Breath Discovered LONDON (JPiA firm nt nt ish chemists announced it has nra duced beer with a breathless qual itythe kind you can drink with out storing up any tell-tale fumes. The Bradford Yorkshire firm said It could treat any bottled beer wim a cniorophyll process which wouldn't change the taste or qual ity but would take away that after-drinking breath. A London newspaper the Sun day Dispatch tested the beer on a panel of experts and ordinary uxm&crs ana saia ine - reception was enthusiastic Only objection came from 1 woman. She complained the fume less beer just made it easier for errant husbands. The chemists said one bottle of tneir Dreamless beer was all that was needed. After that , a man couia up anything for several hours.' The chlorophyll would not eliminate the resulting stagger or nangover but at least there d be no fumes. Columbia River Chinook SillillOII For Canning Or Freezing Lb. 218 IL Coamardal C ; - o services I Minister Riiles No Girl Can Become Angel HURST GREEN. Eng. (A There are Angels in Heaven, no doubt, the Rev. Charles Godfrey Bell said in his sermon Sunday. But, he added with a toucl of sadness in bis voice, no little girl can aver hope to be one. His discourse on Angela . was comment on a debate which has shaken this vfHa?e of 700. It start ed some weeks ago when the vicar objected to the erection of a marble figure of an Angel over the grave of 9-year-old Kathleen Reese. A Church of England official. the chancellor of the diocese, re fused to permit a memorial of such design, and now citizens are signing a petition to the Archbishop 01 canterbury, pleading with him to sustain little children in the faith that they may become Angela. in vicar s point was that the figure of an Angel in a cemetery in inappropriate if it suggests a hope that humans, even the sweet est of little girls, might , attain an angelic status. . . "Nothing official has been said that denies the existance of Angels nor our belief in immortality," the vicar said. "What has been said is tnat neither we ourselves nor our children become Angels when we die. Angels are a separate or der or creation. Alan is made lower than the Angels. His destiny is not to become an Angel but to become one of the family of God. Angels and men worship togeth er, and; often, particularly at Christmas time, they sing togeth er, tne Kev. sell continued. Often, when a person is in difficulty, a Guardian Angel comes to his aide. and may call to his assistance the Archangels Gabriel, ' Michael and the rest, he said. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Reese, the parents of little Kathleen who may have no Angel over her grave un less tne archbishop overrules the vicar, were not satisfied with the clergyman's explanation. "It is not a question of whether there are Angels," said Reese. "The point is that a little girl had Deen taugnt to believe in them, and did believe In them." The parents said they had let- A M . 1 1 9 iers rrom sympathizers an over the country who believe Kathleen should have an Angel over her grave. ; Miners Term ract 'Great Victory' PITTSBURGH C)-J u b 1 1 a n t soft coal miners, fear of a budset- wrecking strike lifted from their minds, hailed their new contract, giving xnem a pay boost of S1.8Q a aay, as "a great victory," Sun day. i - John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, reached agreement with Northern soft coal operators Saturday, halting a strike of 170,000 workers set for Monday. Lewis likely win Insist on. and get, the same terms from the rest of the industry for his 300,000 otner members. The agreement raises the Nor thern miners' pay to $18.25 a day. The operators also will pay 40 cents a ton into the miners' wel fare fund, instead of 30 cents, as in the past From miners and their families In Western Pennsylvania came ex pressions of unalloyed happiness. "Sure rm happy," said 20-year-old Raymond Bosnich of Guys Run Road. "We're all happy. Who wouldn't be? It waa a grand Vic tory for John ur Ben Marchese, 29, a motorman in the Wheeling Steel Company's 700-man Harmar pit at Harmar- ville. Pa, declared: "There couldn't be better news for me. My wife is expecting her tirst baby in January. They were saying about the same thing that John A. Busarel lo, director of UMW Dist. 18 at Pittsburgh, put more formally: "It is tha geatest victory ever achieved by any labor leader in America for the benefit of the United Mine Workers and the coal companies as welL SPY CHARGES LEVELLED LONDON UP) - Forty Bulgarian Roman - Catholics, Including 28 priests, have been accused by the Communist government' in Sofia of planning a coup d'etat and spy ing for the Vatican and France, the, Moscow radio said early Mon day. The smallest star is believed to be about 2,500 miles in diameter, says the National Geographic So ciety. : 110! We do Not tell "Chicken in a Box." Our good friends on S. Commercial do that Ex clusively. - -. BUT! We DO fry chicken the home cooked crlspT way. Folks tell us U is real good. Served la out dining room end CHcIicn In Esxcs 7p Go THY m hnoTi Driva Ja llext door to Dztve In Thedre on XL tZZ. NewCont Wants Police Job Bach mrr ( . e i VI- i i Shown at work at the city engineering shop at 22ad and Mission Sta is Arch Wilsen. farmer Salem He has been granted a Civil Service Comielsal heating for Wednesday. Wilsen was dismissed from the I force en physical grounds following injury in line transferred him t the shop job. Protestant Church Qosed Again in Italy ROME UPi - Police blocked all entrances to the American Church of Christ building Sunday for the second straight Sunday and pre vented the holding" of religious services. , j , . In defiance, Cline R. Paden of Brownfield, Tex rounded up four taxis and two private automobiles and took about 30 members of the church to San Cesareo, a small village about 20 miles southeast of Rome. There services were held in a small Church of Christ with out interference. The churches are required to ob tain government recognition under laws passed during .Mussolini's fascist regime. ) Police also have stopped services held by two other . Protestant groups, the Assembly of God and Pentecostal Church. - ' The Italian government, through a police officer, Dr. Roberto Pep pi, has said, "there is no issue whatsoever of religious liberty. These churches haye not complied with Italian law reguiring recog nition and permission to operate. Other cults are operating without interference.' Before Paden led his group to San Cesareo he said police had barred the entrances to his Rome church building so effectively that "no one can come in, not even into my quarters. Gladiator Show 1 Proves ROME UP- Gladiators fought again in tne Colosseum Saturday night but the show flopped. Less than 6,000 persons, mostly tourists, turned out to see a high ly publicized pageant: The Co losseum through the centuries." After the first ! hour only a handful remained. In ancient days, 70,000 Romans used to watch the bloody circuses. I ' One Roman critic summed up the revival: "Something for, rural fair. - .1 ' Chlorine Is needed to DDT." make 11 III I N I V 1AM e I Flap Don't Buy Wiitiour ITJTLE INSURANCE Asrrance' of title validity is the most important detail to Wtch for when buying any type of real proper tj The difference in actual price of a piece of property may be slight. The difference between a raKd tide and a f aulty title can mean the Iocs of your homel , Whenever yoa buy real ' propeity) seeua about "T and T title inaurance : complete protection for yxwr mrettoienL i. , . j . ; . .. . ! I Ffoy acsfe . laaalaf arpoa T ood V f Kit levraece DDDDcBDnpcnaD' A COMPAIVV I CAritAL tuiriiri and r-. ' UVr 22. -I 'V.., s police f fleer aeektng reinstatement. of doty two yean age. The city (Statesman Fbota.) - ' Ethel Barryinore Dnnlinna PnmtMAtit -ft ' sVt v" ..." : rVvaaa9 wuuutut Morsft who recently aaid he An To vl 6attlAm At would not campaign for the Re VH A UX I OeiUemeill publican ticket after Sen. Taft (R l . SANTA MONICA, Calif. Actress Ethel Barrymore declined to comment on the Internal Reve nue Bureau's disclosure she set tled an income tax claim of $98,660 tor .9w wes, u iMi, Miss Barrymore did make this observation to a newsman, how ever: "I, think ifi foul of the papers to print such! stories. The press must be hard up for news if it must go back to 1937. Why they go after Sen. Nixon?" ack to 1937. Why don't The revenue; bureau said its rea soning in 1937 'was that the actress had "no future. She has since had lucrative t stage and screen roles. j Vancouver Island Thnber Ablaze ; CHEMAINUS, B. C. UPh-A for est fire raged out of control through 150 acres of virgin forest 24 miles north! of here Sunday. An official of a MacMillan and Bloedel Ltd- Cooper Canyon camp said, the fire started late Friday when winds blew slash fires out of control in a rich fir and hem lock tract on nearby Sugar Loaf Mountain. . s "It's burning through the nicest timber on Vancouver-Island, he saia.- MOT OVER MOVIE FATAL ROSARIO, Argentina (AVMovie fans here did not like the numer ous cuts made in a film and staged a riot before the doors of a theater Sunday. Results: One passerby j snot to oeatn, several other per sons injured, j . 1 ittoWrtfcio 1 ffow Showing Open 6:4& uwwm tsassBBS SVaaaM Comedy Ce-Featore "The Fabuloua SenorUaf w'Tlrtth!EsteHU-' . rA T I U 8 T ) I I C I O W f Riiitvii ovu n.rso.ooe mm 1 Senate 'Rich Man's Club,' Morse Warns WASHINGTON UfVSen. Morse (R.-Ore.) said Sunday nizht something has got to be done In this country "about political fi nancing", because "too many poli ticians are not free men." Appearing on a television inter view CBS "Man of the Week- Morse indicated he was not talk ing about Sen. Richard Nixon of California, the . Republican vice- presidential nominee whose trus tee fund has raised a furor in the current campaign. - "it is too early to lump to a conclusion until we have all the facts in the case," Morse said. adding that Nixon did nothing dis honest although he may have made a personal mistake. Earns From Lectures ; Morse said the Senate Is ."rapid' ly becoming, a rich man's club" and that the only way he himself broke even was to make from $600 to $700 a month on lectures. The Oregon Senator added he felt it an obligation not to take advan tage of his position and that he limited bis lectures to only enough to keep out of the red. - The Nixon situation, Morse said. serves notice on all politicans that they must account to the public every year the amount and source of all their income whether they consider it an Invasion of their privacy or not. ' - Says No Proof Given Asked if the dispute robbed the Republican campaign of the cor ruption - in - government Issue, Morse said he didn't think so be cause "I don't think there's been any proof that Nixon's been cor- I rupt' Ohio) threw in actively with the I GOP nominee, Dwight D. Eisen hower, predicted a realignment of the Democratic and ; Republican parties. . This shift has been going on since the Bull Moose movement of 1312 and "obviously we cannot continue with two parties - split right down the middle,' Morse said. Morse said he "planned to vote I iorisennower as 01 now oui was warening me campaign -very carefully and would vote for "the candidate I think will serve my country best1 The continuity of the British monarchy has only been broken once in over 1,000 years. Go? really ebon clofi: MAYTAG CONVENTIONAL America's- favorite! Martags are bdllt for long life and quaW ity perionnance..CyTafoam washing action. xua-capacity tab. Tnrce models. Stt yOffX I.WTA0 Your Old Washer May Be Your Down .Payment a V" f ' " Prisoners Learn More From Lecture When Told by 'Champ9 ( CHICAGO UP) - Prisoners jammed Into a basement room in the Cook County (Chicago) jail Sunday. . They were gathered several hundred of them for the usual weekly lecture on how to stay out of trouble when they are freed. But this one was different. Nobody yawned. None of the men udgeted. There was no scraping or The silence remained unbroken! until 30 seconds after the talk was t finished. Then the "boys." overcoming their uncertainty about what they should do under the unusual circumstances sud denly let loose with cheers and applause. .. L - . . . Shake "Champ's Band While guards watched nervous ly, prisoners rushed forward to shake hands with the speaker Jack Dempsey, former heavy weight champion of the world. Dempsey harked back to Sept. 22. 1927. when he lost bis attempt to regain the cherished title from Gene Tunney. The old champ said: "Twenty-fiv years ago I thought X bad received a tough break. It seemed a tough break at the time, but it turned out to be the great est single thing that ever hap pened to me. Mentions Long Count : "I'm referring to the long count decision in my fight with Tunney at Soldier Field. I made the mistake of not walking, to a neutral corner after Tunney was knocked down. Everybody blamed the referee, but it was my fault. "From that day on, everybody has been for me. So, you see, if a break goes against you, keep your head because things will straighten themselves out Make the best of your situation here and some day the crowd will be with you, too." 2-7829 Gates Open 1:45 Show At 7:15 Starts Tonlte (San.) The Big Picture - All Should See In Technicolor "African Queen Oscar Winner Humphrey Bogart Plus When I Grew Up" Bobby DrisooU MAYTAG DUTCH OVEN GAS RANGE Big, super-insulated oven keeps beat la, cooks with the gas off. Giant top burners heat faster, eae less gas. 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