The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, December 28, 1952, Page 10, Image 10

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    10 Tho Stat man, Scaom. Ort, Stmday, DKmbtr S3, If 12
fton't JCook Now. . -
but . . . the new bridge is nice though we
miss those sunsets. The sun was usually
Just going down, or its glow was left In the
Western sky as we went home each night
across the old bridge. The color effects and
reflections in the water were one of the pleas
ures of the day. The new bridge is too far
north to get' the -full beauty of the river.
However, we could not expect even the most
sympathetic of highway departments to re
route the Pacific highway so a few senti
mental old women could have better sunsets.
Musical progress . . . The .Metropolitan's
presentation of Lg Bcherae over., the air Sat
urday was in English and this time in real
English. All leads speak United States; as
they are natives, Nadine Conner,' Richard
Tucker, Patricial Munsel and Robert Merrill.
Sometimes great artists singing in English
are better understood in Italian or French. "
Women Denied
In Try to Aid
Georgia Slayer
LOVEJOY Ga. OB Six white
and, four Negro women interceding
for Rosa Lee Ingram, convicted
Negro murderess, bumped into
Georgia's segregation laws Friday
and were rebuffed by Gov. Herman
Talmadge.
The governor refusid to discuss
clemency, for the controversial,
43 - year - old life - termer with
the New York group, one of whom
linked herself with an agency twice
tagged Communist and subversive.
He indirectly compared their
visit with a New York demonstra
tion, for Julius Rosenberg and wife,
EthteU under a death sentence for
treason.
Tklmadge, returning from a hol
ldat hunting trip, met the 10 in
the I driveway of the white
columned, colonial - type home on
his ' 2,5i)0 - acre plantation here.
Arriving a few minutes earlier
by taxi from Atlanta, the women
had been invited by the gover
nor's trim and. attractive wife,
Betty Talmadge, to .await his re
turn in segregated race groups.
"We nave segregation here,"
Mrs. Talmadge told them. "The
white ladies are welcome to come
Inside and the colored ladies may
await with some nice colored people
here on the farm."
The women spurned the offer
and waited in the driveway in their
cabs.
A "co - leader" identified her
self as Elaine Ross of New York,
a representative of the Civil Rights
Congress, listed twice by the De
partment of Justice as Commu
nistic and subversive.
She told Talmadge she and the
others were "shocked" when state
troopers with a court order stopped
them a mile away when they tried
to pay a Christmas Day visit to
Mrs. Ingram in the Georgia Peni
tentiary at Reidsville. She com
plained that the trooper were
armed.
The governor repl ed that the
state merely was guarding against
a possible riot.
"I read," he said, "that the same
group (the Civil Rights Congress)
demonstrated at Sing Sing for Mrs.
Rosenberg, a convicted traitor, and
we don't want anything like that
happening in Georgia."
Talmadge explained, that state
1 w gave him no power to pardon
or parole Mrs. Ingram, convicted
with her two young sons of murder
ing an aged tenant farmer in 1947
in a dispute over straying livestock.
He referred the women to the State
Pardorr and Parole Board.
He explained further that only
relatives or attorneys are allowed
to' visit convicts in the State Peni
tentiary and advised the group to
contact the state's director of cor
rections. "You will be accorded the same
respect and privileges as any other
citizens of (Jeorgia or any other
state, no more, no less," he told
the women.
From .the street . . . Maybe it's becauso
there are fewer houses elaborately decorated
this year that we notice the lighted trees In
the houses. It seems that every house has a
tree, even the tiny and the large. .One house
alone on Our way to town shows no free and .
as we know there are children ' there, we
, wonder why.
Full coverage ... Santa brought lis many ;
things Among the gifts was a blue denim '
farmery jacket, purchased big enough to go
over sweaters and heavy shirts. Relatives,
upon holding a conference as ta whether it
should be-exchanged for . a smaller, can-
eluded that, for practical purposes we Should
keep it needing only a pedr of rubber boots 7
to be completely covered. Further discussion
i resulted in the decision that for economy, a
' pair of, jeans of the same size, worn only with
a hat. Would give equal coverage. You see,
it does pay to be short . . . Maxine Buren.
T
Drought Cuts
Into Yugoslav
Food, Defense
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia I
Tough times have hit Yugoslavia
a crippling blow under . the belt.
A country - wide, crop - parching
drought, severest since the war,
has left the nation's larder lean.
The consequences grow more aj
parent every day.
Lacking foodstuffs for the usual
exports to pay its bills. Premier
Marshal Tito's Communist govern
ment has taken several drastic
steps.
The government announced
Thursday it is cutting its military
spending by about 10 per cent next
jear.
Defense Minister Ivan Gosniak
called the proposed 600 million dol-
!ar defense appropriation a peace
udget. obviously a reflection of
the government's calculation that
the danger of an invasion from the
CominfoTm countries is a little less.
About 80 per cent of the budget
is ticketed for defense.
Gosniak said the econor. . will
be made possible by cutting the
training period for military re -serves
from three to (two years,
demolizing the Home Guard, which
was formed to operate against in
ternal enemies, and applying un
expended appropriations from 1952.
He said Yugoslavia's readiness
and ability to defend herself will
not be impaired.
In search of revenue and to pre
vent a waste of foreign exchange,
Yugoslavia has imposed a virtually
prohibitive tax sometimes as
much as eight times "the original
cost on imports classified as
luxuries.
:- Rents have been ordered doubled
since November. The increase goes
into government coffers, regardlss
of whether the property is public
or private.
an.
December 28
Mr. and Mrs. Harland Brock and Mr. and Mrs
Ernest H. Miller at home, Bluff Ave, 4 to 7 pjn.
Holiday open house at Charles Fouger residence
for college contingent, Jan Foulger, Jody Rick-
em uoroay owigarx. ixaoine Uuman and Patri-
s, 7:30
cla Todd hostesses.
to 9:30 p. m.
December 29
December SO
Kappa Kappa Gamma holiday tea at Charles Mills
home, 685 Boice St.
Junior Catholic Daughters winter formal. Catholic
Center.
Mr. and! Mrs. Hugh Taylor at home. 1810 n fit
5:30 to 8:30 pan.
December 31 Waverly! Club dinner dance. Senator Hotel.
Tillicum; dinner dance, Salem Armory.
Tillicuna dinner dance, Salem Armory.
; Subscription Club dinner dance, Marion Hotel.
Carousel dance, Izaak Walton Clubhouse.
Eta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi formal New Year's
Cama Club dance, Catholic Center,
party, Mayflower Hall, 9 to 1 a. m.
January 1 Mrs. E. H. Kennedy open house, 2705 Bluff St., 2
to 7 pjn.
7
"Si. .
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'tr-
c. . tell
. -Vj t - t
VICTORY - President-elect Eisenhower and Mamie be an
as convention's first ballot puts diesi on road to die waits
House January 20, ending 20-year reign by Democrats.
r
NEW WEAPONS-U.S. Atomic
Commission has conducted
H-Bomb and A -Bomb tests.
THREE SAD QUEENS-At King George VIs funeral.
Queen Elizabeth II. Queen Grandmother Mary, 84, Queen
Mother Elizabeth separately mourn a father, son and husband.
Coos Milkmen
Ask Hearing
COOS BAY OR Coos County
milk producers have decided to
ask the State Board of Agriculture
for a hearing in a rnove to get a
higher milk price. .
Earlier the producers threatened
to withhold milk from the market
unless they were granted the hear
ing within a week. But spokesmen
for the state milk marketing ad
ministration threatened to send in
a milk supply if the producers
took such action. i
The members of the Southwest
ern Oregon Milk Producers Associ
ation then agreed to ask for the
hearing, withdrawing the strike
threat.
EFFECTIVE LESSON I
ANKARA, Turkey (INS) Po
lice in Ankara have a method for
curing . drunken drivers, i Anyone
caught loaded at the wheel is
driven 25 miles outside the city
and left to make his own way
back. The police take all the of
fender? ready cash, too, to insure
the less.031 is effective.
Teen-Age Dance Monday
A dance for all interested teen
age girls and boys is planned for
Monday night, Dec. 29 at the May
flower Hall between 8 and 11 p. m.
The affair is being sponsored by
the Nebraska Club. Cloyd Law
rence's orchestra will play for dan
cing featuring his solovox. The
music is furnished by Union 315.
The committee in charge of the
dance includes Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Gebauer and Mr. and Mrs. Willis
Shipman. ,
Ex-Mayor Yoran
Of Eugene Dies
EUGENE OF) Darwin E. Yo
ran, 84, former postmaster and one
time mayor here, died Friday.
Yoran was postmaster from 1922
to 1935. Prior to that he had oper
ated a shoe store. He was mayor
from 1912 to 1914.
A son and two daughters, includ
ing Mrs. Beatrice A. Ellertsen,
Portland, survive.
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HOSTAGE Prison riots hit
st doxen states. A convict
holds guard at knifepoint;
.....
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SEA SAGA Millions of hearts thrilled at apt. Kurt Carlson fought to
save his stricken ship, the Flying Enterprise, from the Atlantic. It
foundered after two. weeks but the doughty skipper was rescued.
KOREA War and truce talk dragged agonii
ingly on without decision. VS. guards quell
Red Fw riot st Koje Isund compot
undY
EX-SLAVE NOW 10S
DENVER (JP) She used to be
a slave shooing flies in the- home
of the Tennessee colonel who
owned her but; even now at 103,
Mrs. Chaney Myers says "I'm still
as supple as a girl. After the
Civil War freed her, she and her
husband headed west to a roaring
goldmlning camp at Victor, Colo.,
where she cooked for the miners
and her husband worked In the
mines. He died in 1922.
LOST and FOUND
Snail whn run dec. A
U IIm mim Curuty Pbon J2S-R.
IX) ST- Browa bood i 1
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stiroenic Hormone
forlbunger-Lookin
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Offer
Skin
Beauty genius Helena Rubinstein has helped thou
sands upon thousands of women to look youngerl
he was the first to take estrogenic hormones, nature's
pwn youth substances, and put them in cosmetics.
ftnee then, women over 35 nave found her Estrogenic
lormone Twins the surest, most effective way to
younger-looking skinf
To all you women who have not yet learned what
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Capital
Drug Store
403 Staf Street - Comer of Liberty
Wo Gfvo $H Green Stamps on All Cash Purchase
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