, . . The Stateamrm. Salem, Oroq.. Thursday. December 4, 1SS2 Bad Roads Block School Bns Route North of Salem Dayton Marine iven Silver Star Medal BREMERTON Ul Carl S Johnson, m Marine Corps private from roete 1, Dayton, Or., was warded the SUver Star Medal Wednesday for conspicuous gal lantry in action In a Korean battle last Aug-. 13. The. medal was presented by Capt. C. G. Oetg, commanding oftkreif of the U. S. Naval hospital w here! the Marine is being- treated for wduads received, in the action for which he was decorated. Tie official citation said Johnson wa- serving as an automatic rifle rran with a Marine infantry com pany during a raid on an enemy fortification. "During the battle," it said, "he fearlessly moved into an enemy bunker, killing three of the enemy, and when his ammunition ran out used his rifle as a club to kill another. Although seriously wound ed in arms and legs, he covered the platoon's withdrawal by hurling hpnd grenades at the counter-attacking enemy." His parents, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Johnson, his sister, and his fiancee, attended Jhe ceremonies. Boos, Hoots In Parliament Brings Crisis LONDON UF The Labor oppo sition raised cries of wounded pa triotism in the House of Commons Wednesday night and demanded a parliamentary showdown with the Conservatives on charges that the House presiding officer was un V fair. Out of the booing and hooting session came an official Labor challenge to the lit- of Prime Min ister , Winston Churchill's govern ment. It will bring debate Thursday boiA-een Churchill who thought Lborite called him a goose and the feuding Laborite leaders, ex-Prime Minister Clement Attlee d leftist Aneurin Bevan. Parliamentarians couldn't recall a precedent from the situation that developed. Churchill let it pass when a La borite. unless Churchill mis-heard, called him a goose, but the 78-year-old prime minister strongly objected to being hooted at three tiroes by Labor members. It developed in debase on an Allied command setup for the Med iterranean countries. Road conditions in an area just north of Salem and east of Cherry Avenue are so bad that school bus service has been curtailed, it was reported Wednesday. Marion County Commissioner Roy Rice, in reporting to the County Court on the matter, added that if the roads were not im proved mail service would soon be cut off. too. The area Is contained in the South Keizer Special Road Dis trict. Residents of the district as sess themselves for road repairs. Rice said the roads there "are in very bad condition." Patterson Says Truckers Won't Be Penalized PORTLAND m State Sen. Paul Patterson, who is expected to be the next governor of Oregon, ad vised truckers Wednesday that they would get relief from any inequities in the new weight-mile tax. He told the Oregon Automobile Dealers' Association, "despite the heat of the campaign over truck taxation, I feel the Legislature's attitude was best expressed by the interim committee in its unsolicited action favoring an effective date of Nov. 5, rather than last Jan. 1. "This law will remain in oper ation long enough to observe its effects and while the Legislature makes further studies, then changes will be made to strengthen the weak spots and to ease undue hardships. "Changes will be made sooner than if the trucking industry can show, inequitable treatment t o some of its segments. The overall attitude of the Legislature cer tainly is not for pushing trucks off th highways," he said. Russell . Bonesteele, Salem, was installed as president of the association. Gt. Douglas, etc., 2d graf prs Judge's Car In Accident The radiator on Municipal Judge Douglas L Hay's car lost Its anti-freeze Wednesday eve ning when it was punctured in a collision at Court and Liberty Streets. Hay, who resides at 315 Belle rue St., was travelling home when the collision occurred. Driver of the other car was L. E. Klumpp, 680 Tryon Ave., a local realtor. Kiumpp's car received minor rear-end damage. Neither driver was injured and no citations were issued. Hay's car fc id to be towed from the scene. Open 6:45 P. M.4 Tyrone Power Penny Edwards - In Technicolor "Pony Soldier . Linda Darnell Gary Merrill "Night Without Sleep" Continuous Bonse, The Chimp "Bonzo Goes to College Marie Windsor - In Cineeotor -"OUTLAW WOMEN" ODenC:4SP.M. I Two Chillers! son. or a MONSTER" Bela Lagosi "RETURN OF THE TAMPERE" Alaskan Talks With McKay Ralph Lomen, Nome and Seattle business man who wants to be governor of Alaska, talked for 20 minutes Wednesday with Gov. Douglas McKay, who will be sec retary of the interior under President-elect Eisenhower. ( The governors of Alaska, Haw aii and the Virgin Islands are ap pointed by the president with the advice of the secretary of the in terior. A spokesman for Gov. McKay said Lomen asked the governor for the job, but that the governor made no commitments. "Lomen is one of several names being considered, and wo have several letters recommending Lo men 's appointment," the spokes man said. Skuli May Solve Disappearance Of Salem Policeman in 1930 Free-Spender Answer to Lost $2,500 PORTLAND UFi - Cread L. Jeffries, who lost $2,500 on a Portland street Tuesday, got most of it back Wednesday. Portland merchants became sus picious of a seaman who was spending money freely. They called police, who finally tracked the wandering spender down at Yam hill, southwest of Portland. Poll said Seaman Charles Mabry Sandridge, 27, had $2,500 in his pockets, and admitted finding it on a Portland sidewalk. They said he admitted spending about $450 in the past day. He finally was freed, and the money turned over to the 75-year-old Jeffries, who headed for a bank. Jeffries said the money, wrapped in paper, fell out of his waistband while he was walking in downtown Portland Tuesday. The money was part of the life savings of Jeffries, a retired restaurant operator. 1 NOW SHOWING - OPEN 9:45 "SON OF PALEFACE" Boa Hope - Jane Knsaell Key Sogers "STEEL TOWN" Asa Sheridan John Lend now SBOimiG! MAT. DAILY FROM 1 TJ. FIRST TIMS ON THS SCR ESN I ' si waltek scdrrs I ECH jl3 - .: Nirni n Jkr imiiii ml nitiicn mHm I -STAYLDRTAYLORrOMrABiE Ul OCSGC ,.r EMITS ? V; r oS czzcryyrnl james ds710p 3 ROSEBURG if) A skull found 40 miles east: of here Nor. 14 has been turned over to Dr. Homer Harris, head of the. Oregon State Police laboratory, for possible iden tification. State Police Lt, Howard Morgan of Medford has brought up the possibility that the skull may be that of Cherokee James, about 60, a Salem policeman who disap peared while hunting in the area Oct. 6, 1330. Morgan formerly was stationed here and recalled the hunt for James, whose correct name was Emery W. James. Ranger Fred Adams of Glide took charge of the search in the Little River area where James was lost. He was aided by Jasper Palouse, an Indian guide, and woodsmen. James' tracks were found, but could be followed for only a short distance. James was a state prison guard before he joined the Salem police force. Because of his repu tation as a stern man. there was speculation that an embittered ex convict might have slain him in the woods. There also was the theory that James had suffered a heart attack, since he was subject to seizures. His watch chain was found in 1939. The skull was turned up by a logger. James brother - in - law, Walter Dorman of Salem, who was a mem ber of the original search party, came here to inspect the skull, but could give no help. A man named 1 oher, who lived in Portland, disappeared in the same area in 1921. T e skull could possibly, be his, Undersheriff ELM. Schwader said. Dr. Harris, here to testify at a murder trial, told Schwader he would make laboratory "'tests on the skull to try to determine the age and sex. (In Salem Wednesday, George Edwards, 2445 Hazel Ave., now with the United States National Bank and long-time friend of James, said be hoped this find would solve the mystery of the man's disappearance. (Edwards and James were both on the Salem police force from 1924 until the hitter's disappear ance In 1930. A watch fob that was found in the area in 1939 was sent to Edwards for identification to see if it might have belonged to James. "I surely couldn't be sure," Edwards said Wednesday. "The fob looked similar to one ho used to wear, but I couldn't identify it positively. (Two men who were with James on the ill-fated hunting trip have since died by natural means). Taft Denies Hasty Action in Durkin Stand By RELMAN MORIN NEW YORK i Sen. Robert A. Taft said Wednesday he "took great care" in writing his outspok en criticism of the designation of Martin P. Durkin, Democratic la bor leader, to be the next secre tary of labor in the Eisenhower Cabinet. Taft said bis statement was no hasty action. "I took great care In writing It," he said, "and I think it speaks for itself." Failure to Pay Full Income Tax Laid To Bookkeeping PORTLAND (A Dr. Miller IE. Cooper, Klamath Falls dentist on trial on a charge of falsifying his income tax returns, made only bookkeeping errors, his attorney said Wednesday. Dr. Cooper is charged with con cealing $15,963 in net income in the years 1S45 through 1947. The attorney told the court the dentist paid too little, but only because he made bookkeeping errors. Justice Lusk to Address Banquet For First Citizen Selection of Justice Hall S. Lusk of the Oregon Supreme Court as speaker for the Salem First Citi zen banquet, Jan. 25, was an nounced Wednesday. Lusk has served on the court since 1937 and prior to that on the Multnomah Circuit Court. The Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring the public affair to honor a person to be chosen by a secret committee as outstanding in the community. Suggestions for the selection may be submitted at the chamber office. C-47 Lost With 13 Men Aboard SAN BERNARDINO. Calif. (J1 Air Force planes put in a second fruitless day searching Wednesday for a C-47 transport missing with 13 men aboard. The operation in volved 75 planes flying high and low level patterns from Bakersfield to the Mexican border. " A fire reported earlier In the San Bernardino mountains near Big Bear Lake proved to be a blaze in a winter sports lodge. The plane, based at Offut AFB, Omaha, Neb., was flying over the desert between Tucson, Ariz., and Riverside, Calif., when last heard from in a storm onday night. Iff A Dividend -At Ho Extra Cbargo Now -Every Day, Starting at 4 P. M. AT FAMOUS BUFFET f (o)( O J3 (Children Under 10 - Just 44c) Its' simple as ABC, folks! Just come on downtown end njoy Nohlgren's Famous Buffet Dinner, and then take seats In the TV section of Nohlflren'a New Marine Room - Downstairs! V Check your newspapers for the TV programs you want to see, and plan your dinner accordingly. V TV section open at Nohlgren's every day from 4 P.M. RESTAURANT Downtown Salem On State Street Luncheon Buffet All You Cn Eat for C0t U to 4 Daily Except Sunday Buffet Dinners Served From 11 A. M. to 8:30 P. M. Week Days end 12 to 8 on Sundays Mary Barton's Organ Music on Main Floor f Girlie' Type Magazines Denounced WASHINGTON Iri Novelist Margaret Culiin Banning said Wednesday about tw . billion "girl ie" magazines are sold annually on U. S. newsstands and serve "no purpose except pictorial prost itution." - ! Testifying before a special House inquiry committee, the 1 year old writer said that of 1.231 magazines currently being published, all but about 100 are classified as "girl ies." She denounced them as "vic ious and provocative. - I At the outset, committee mem bers qualified Mrs. Banning as an expert witness because of her re search for an article entitled "filth on the Newstands,"-published in the October issue of Reader's Di gest. The House group, beaded by Rep. Ezekiel Gathings (D-nArk), is making a broad study of! alleged salacious -iterator e including books, magazines and so-called comic booklets dealing with sex, crime and horror. ; Mrs. Banning, a graduate of Vas sar College, told the lawmakers she found tnat many buyers of "girlie" magazines surreptitiously remove the covers before taking them home, "The newstands in America car ry a .display of sex provocation to be found nowhere else in the world," she said. "These magazines are not for fun, nor play, nor beauty, but simply issued for straight provication." As steps toward a clean-up, Mrs. Banning proposed self-censorship by the publishing industry, stricter enforcement of laws against ob scene literature, and an aroused community opinion. "Political censorship, whether it is local, state or federal, is not the answer, she said. Air Force Accepts New Type of Jet FARMXNGDALE N. Y. uB The first in a new series of jet miles-per-hour class" was accept ed by the Air Force Wednesday from Republican Aviation Corp. The swept-wing F84F fighter known as the "Thunderstreak" is an advancement over the "Thun derjets" now being used in Korea, the company said. Republic said the plane can car ry a greater external armament and fuel load than previous F-84 models. Gath Grothers' Turkeys Win McMINNVHXE LP Perennial winners dominated the 11th annual Pacific Coast Turkey Exhibit here Wednesday. ' The Gath Brothers of Turner won eight contests. Othei top win ners included the Lyons Triple B Turkey Ranch of Portland, and Loren Johnson of Scappoose. AH have dominated in previous shows. The exhibit will continue three more days. TRY A PRIVATE DANCE LESSON ONLY 1. 00 AU type of daneta tamght Studio Open, IS A. M. t 10 P. M. JON-MAR DANCING STUDIO 177 Serrth Commercial t Phone 4-4961 Tele-fun by Warren Goodrich i "That's enough. Junior I Wo i don't want It laid that our 1 little pig hogs the line!"... liemind the youngsters that no one can cau them while the line is tied up . . Pacifio Telephone. The SCO C. Annual Midi-Season D earanco o 600 s s : All Sales Final - No Exchanges . . Open Fridays -til 9 p. m. Clearance of Dresses Now $ O Now $12 Now '513 73 Dresses formerly sold for 14.98 to 17.93 . 147 Dresses formerly sold for 17.95 to 19.93 . .1 174 Dresses formerly sold for 1 9.95 to 24.93 . . . . 77 Dresses formerly sold for 24.95 . . . . . . . . . Now $17 71 Dresses formerly sold for 29.95 . . . . . . . . . Now $10 58 Dresses formerly sold for 34.95 to 39.95 . i . .... Now $24 Clearance 100 All-Wool Suit s 97 94 82 SUITS. SOLD FOR 39.95 TO 49.15 JNOW (Included in this group famous Reaenblum Salts Gaynes Leeds. Ltd. Sizes lt-29) scrrs, sold for 49.93 to; 55.09 ..NOW (Included in this group are famous Frintseas Salt sises 12H te t4H) SUITS, SOLD FOR 49J5 TO 95.99 -NOW $20 $33 $30 (Included in this group axe Mi lis teens raits with 1 skirts. Sltea 9 te 15. 19-29, 38-44, 14H te 24H) Clearance 100 All-Wool Coata 270 Better Coats tn all size ranges, colors styles 29 44 549 $69 For st ma nn - Strooks - English Tweeds Julliard i Clearance of Fine Millinery M HATS THAT WERE FORMERLY 7 J5 TO 12.15 . -NOW $4.99 Included In thfs safe of dresses are Junior - Misses - Women's Dresses. Sixes 9 to 17il0to 20, 12Vi to.24. & - U . : - - 4 si r 409 Court Street 0 h -7. COLOR CARTOON LATE NEWS 4-