fc&nsmcmv Orocjcm;" l&mdar; February i. 1833 . - esssae 1 GOP Leaders Hope: - For Unity as Result " Of Ike's Talk TodaY . By JACK BELL and - CHARLES F. BARRETT' WASHINGTON - lJ Republican en Capitol HUH art hoping that President Eisenhower's State of the Union Message will give the administration a fresh start after the burnt of the last two weeks. The President goes before Coo cress Monday to unveil the new Europe Flood At a By The Associated Press Hurricane winds drive high waves across lowland towns and fields In Southeastern Britain, The Netherlands, and Belgium. At least 428 persons, including six Americans, known to have drowned. , Death tell is ICS in Britain, H9 in The Netherlands, and IS In Belgium. Two-day toll, in cluding 13 victims of British .ferry heat sank off Northern Ireland., reaches MO. Thousands left homeless as winds begin to, abate. Damage expected to reach millions of dollars. Relief crews work fe verishly to plug breaks in dikes mmd sand dunes. One U.S. Air Fores service man and five American depend ents known to have perished at Hunstanton, Eng. Others feared .lost. Five hundred U.S. airmen aid in heroie rescue operations. 7 Americans Ride House in English Flood By The "Associated Press Sidelight of Britain's derastat floods: Seven Americans, including a baby,-took a ride on top of their bungalow at Southwold when flood waters swept in from flooded marshes. People on a nearby road turned their automobile lights upon the scene, while rescuers in a row boat took themoff. The names of the Americans were not learned. Along the Lincolnshire-Suffolk border called England's "little Holland" because much of the area has been reclaimed from the sea salt water rolled back into vast acreages. Superintendent G. A. Todd of Lincolnshire police said the homes of 5,000 to 6.000 people had been in undated on a 20-mile stretch of coast. The waves swept away con crete and steel walls 20 feet high. The Thames swirled into the streets of Putney., a Sontwt Ten don suburb, at high tide Sunday night, and water lapeu tae oac sd Cleopatra's Needle, ancient Egyp tian obelisk that stands on the en bankment in the heart of the capi tal. King's LymC ancient Norfolk port, had its worst flood, a tide eight feet higher than the record. Hundreds mere were trapped on the top floors of their homes. " Cley, another seaside town, was under eight feet of water and troops who fought their way into the town found many houses had been swept out to sea. ' Yarmouth, Norfolk fishing port, had seven dead. A veteran of the blitz there said the destruction from waters rushing in from the harbor was the worst he had seen. The gale-whipped tide swirled into the naval dockyard at Sheer- ness on the south bank, of the Thames Estuary and sank the new submarine Sirdar at her dock and capsied . the 1,580 - ton frigate. .Berkeley castle. Three Autos In Accident - Three cars were damaged one person shaken up in a and col- listen Sunday morning at Fyrtle Avenue and Fairgrounds Road. ' ? Drivers of the cars were Vern- on E. Canfield, Salem Route 6, i Box 243, Viola H. Bates, 160 N. 1 24th St, and Charles K. Bic ; land, Lompoc, Calif; Miss Bates . was examined by first aidmen. j but was not taken to a Salem hos- ercai. no citations were issued. ar lakes ? Revolver, Shells 7- I v Marion County sheriffs depu- ties were called to investigate i burglary Sunday at the home of i Max Klotz, Salem Route 3, Box 1938-A v- :wt: ' ' ! Taken from the home was an Ivor Johnson revolver, a 5 belt and holster and one box' of i shells. Entrance to the home,-located about five . miles ' south of ; Salem, was gained by breaking 'Nothing else was disturbed.' UIIY HOT?. For $1.53 T.PoopIe have asked "When you can" serve such a nice dinner on Sunday-for .$1.50 why can't you do It each evening? wr Well, that' a $6400 question and the answer 1. we'exmcaad we wllU' .You may have your choice of several entrees,- soup, salad vegetable, . drink " and t dessert ?A .complete dinner lor just $1.50. ' N . - ... ' administration's program for peace in the world and sound pros perity at home. His speech will be televised, nationally and broad? cast around the . globe. - Republican ' members of Con gress generally agree that if Ei senhower delivers a forceful mes sage on a well-rounded program he can bring squabbling GOP fac tions together and ' solidify some wavering Democratic' support. Some Republican leaders think the- President has been getting too much inexperienced and conflict ing advice. The result, they believe, has shown the winners of the Novem ber election . with somewhat less unity and purpose than the Demo crats who lost it. Storing Up Ammimitioa Democratic leaders at least have agreed to lie low for while on public criticism, at the same time storing up ammunition for 1954 and 1956. On , the eve of Eisenhower's ad dress. House Speaker Martin -ol Massachusetts commented: "I think the message will be completely satisfactory and pleas ing to Congress. Right now I can't see a single area of substantial trouble." . .Martin was among the congres sional leaders who discussed the message with the President in ad vance. World to Study Talk The nation and the world will study the message for indications of what win be done to end the war in Korea and for answers to a host of other foreign and domes tic issues that hang critically over the free world. In Congress there are a number of Southern and border state Dem ocrats who want to give their ac tive support to the President in the fateful days ahead. They haven't been reassured, however, by the new administra tion's troubles over the Defense Department appointments, its mixed-signals approach to govern ment reorganization, its public con flict over cutting taxes and the lack of a unified decision about how to end price and wage con trols. Important Test To these Democrats, whose votes may be needed to put over the administration's program in a closely divided Congress, Eisen hower faces an important test Monday. As one Democratic senator friendly to Eisenhower put it: "If Ike flunks this one with a wishy-washy message demonstrat ing no real leadership heU be in a bad fix." Some influential Republicans agree with that view, contending that while Eisenhower's inaugural message might have been appeal ing to the country as a whole. left problem - beset lawmakers somewhat cold. Republican legislative leaders obviously think that as Eisenhow er himself gathers more White House experience and his lieuten ants familiarize themselves with thir jobs there wUU be fewer bob- Chief Steward Of Cargo Ship Said Murdered SAN DIEGO, Calif. IB The U.S. Coast Guard . reported Sun day that the chief steward of UJS. military cargo - ship aground in Mexican waters was missing ana Deuevea murdered. Radio word from the Coast Guard cutter Morris, standing by the S. S. Fairhope, 433-foot freight er, sara uapt. u. l . Hauman had asked that an armed guard be sent aboard. The Fairhope left San Pedro, Calif.. Thursday. It went aground Friday night on one of the San Be nito Islands. 270 miles south of here. Just when the chief steward dis appeared from the ship was not known here. The message from the cutter said there was blood hi his quarters. The cutter' Morris reached the Fairhope early Sunday. The crew, normally about 40 men, was not believed in danger. fliers of ' a Coast I Guard plane which circled the vessel Saturday reported on tneir return here. A commercial tug. the Viking. was enroute from San Pedro, Cal- if-. to attempt to refloat the freight er. - I ,. It was aground about 30 or 40 yards off the beach in a cove of the largest of the three islands. The sea was calm.- JOB HAS LONG NAME BERLIN W If you can pro nounce the name of this job you probably can have it: Ruinenladen- ausbaumauerermeister. : - . The West Berlin Telegraf carried t Sunday in its help wanted section. t means a stone mason to heln build n war-damaged shops and stores. 1 ffl . D.f A Sen. Taft to Dee As President ' WASHINGTON (Jl Sen. Morse of Oregon said Sunday he believes "the country today would be better off , with Bob Taft as president than - Eisenhower. , "Why?" he was asked on a dis cussion panel televised . by the CBS program "Man of the Week. "Because I think Bob Taft would stand for exactly what he believes m the White House." Morse i plied, "and he wouldn't be tied up with the kind of compromise I be ll ve Eisenhower's tied up with.' Eisenhower beat out Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio for the presiden tial nomination in Chicago last summer. At that time Morse said if Taft were nominated he would "take a walk" and would neither lieve Eisenhower's tied up with.1 A few months later Morse walked right out of the Republi can Party, labeled himself an in dependent and campaigned for Ad lai Stevenson, the Democratic pres idential nominee. It was , during a discussion of his bolt that Morse said be thought the country would be better off with Taft in the White House. I stayed with Eisenhower as long as I had any confidence in his political morality," Morse said. He added that he bolted when he came to the conclusion that Eisenhower "was running . mili tary campaign, not a political campaign, that he was willing to accept support from any source he could get it, that he was willing to say whatever needed to be said for votes." To Fellow Platform The Eisenhower administration already has made clear that it's going to follow the Republican platform. Morse went on, and he said the Republican platform "makes McKinley look like a lib eral." Morse criticized Eisenhower for backing the nomination of former Sen. Richard M. Nixon of Cali fornia as vice president. There should have, been at least three men nominated so a choice could have been made on the convention floor, he said. He disclosed that he was sup porting Sen. Sal tons tall (R-Mass) for the vice presidential nomina tion in Chicago and said that be fore his group could even talk with Saltonstall two emisaries from Eisenhower came to him and said they didn't want any one nom inated except Nixon. Still Opposed Morse reaffirmed his opposition to Charles E. -Wilson, former pres ident of General Motors, as secre tary of defense. He said he would not have any objection to Wilson in another cabinet post, perhaps as secretary of commerce, but that Wilson was not the man for the Pentagon. Profits being made by General Motors, Morse said, are uncon scionably high. He stated that any step toward taking the U. S. Seventh Fleet Off the job of neutralizing . Formosa and unleashing the military strength of the Chinese National ists on the island has "dangerous potentialities. "I want to do anything that's necessary to protect the country and win the peace," Morse said. "But suppose we run into trouble over Formosa. Are we prepared to support the Nationalists with our Navy and Air Force? Are we going to protect Formosa if the Chinese Communists attack it?" The Oregon senator said For mosa could become the spark set ting off a third world war. He said he was also concerned about the possibility of losing some of our allies because of a disagreement about Formosan policy. Toastmasters Officials to -Visit Salem Salem Toastmaster's dub win be host to the governor and dis trict governors of Area 2 at their 6 p.m. meeting Tuesday in The Spa Restaurant, 382 State St. Attending will be Robert Bat- dorf, governor from Area 2 and member of the Capitol Toastmas ter's Club, and district gover nors, Raymond Robb, Albany; Charles Ross, Corvallis; Elmer Amundsen and M. O. Baxton, both of Salem. Topic to be discussed-win be education of mem bership and evaluation of the toastmasters meetings. Toastmaster of the evening will be Robert Powell with Dr. Ray J. Pinson, general chairman and Wade Carter in charge of table topics. Speakers for the evening win be J. F. Ferder, Russell For rest, Paul Frederick, Jack Fria ble and John Perry, BOY CRUSHED TO DEATH ' YAKIMA Ut A 4 year old boy, Tony Ronald Ragan, was crushed to death Sunday beneath bis father's tractor at their Naches Heights ranch Just northwest of here. - ' -. Sheriffs officers said the fath er, Tony Ragan Sr.. put the tractor in reverse and the boy toppled from a trailer hitched to the ma chine..- ; . - . Thcro's $J5.00 ; fa iho Jzckpsll ; From North to South and East to West, , . This dish Is always found;5 It takes a bit of doing, f But folks will gather round. It knows no season ever, . - Or class, or crowd, or throng; Youll find It where : people gather, 1 For food you cant go wrong. 'T.'fs Cci'J.-r' cl r:!:!-rcn's r" C:CD P. a 7cr.!-!;l ulleo Arrives jlra Pario j 'IFo Li Glien arid fto Learn' PARIS W Secretary of State John Foster Dulles arrived in Pa ris Sunday rand told the French people he came here "to listen ancLtoleanu" -. . . But he left no doubt in anyone's mind about . what he wanted to hear most - that France win stop stalling on getting European unity working. He reminded the French that their "leaders had inspired .the two great European unity plans the Schuman . plan for the European coal and steel , community and the Pleven plan for a European De fense Community. .. "Such creative thinking . and planning has caught the imagina tion of the American people and we want to know more about your purposes and plans for the future so that we can take them into ac count in our own planning," he said In a broadcast just after ar rival. Dulles, accompanied by Harold Stassen, . U.S. foreign aid chief, came from Rome, where he was told that Italy fully supported the European Defense Community. He and Stassen are making Pa ris the second and longest stop in their swift 10-day flying tour of Atlantic Pact capitals in Europe. They go to London Tuesday. Dulles told Frenchmen he and U. S. Airmen Among Heroes of Flood at British Resort Town By MICHAEL NEWMAKCH HUNSTANTON, Eng. ID For ty persons, many of them Ameri cans, were believed ' to nave drowned Sunday in foaming North Sea flood waters which over Whelmed this Norfolk coastal re sort. Only the heroie efforts of UJS. airmen and British civilians pre vented the death ton from going higher as swirling waters crushed and swept away houses. Among the heroes was a Toppenish, Wash., man. The American airmen were attached to the nearby Sculthorpe Airbase. A UJS. Air Force spokesman said said at least six Americans were known dead when rescue opera' tions halted Sunday night. He said the dead included one service man and five dependents. Seven other Americans were missing, he said two servicemen and five depen dents. The spokesman added that an undetermined number of Ameri cans was injured. 12 Bodies Twelve bodies were recovered. The houses that took the force of a freak storm were occupied by American service men and their families and British families Part of the main railway line through the town was washed away. In the teeth of the storm and armed only with inadequate equip ment. 500 American airmen rush ed from their base to carry out rescue operations.' -The 67th Air Rescue Squadron was the nucleus of this force. The group's commanding officer. Capt. Gerald A. Weathermen, of Elec tra, Texas, fought the wind and waves in a fragile rubber dinghy until he collapsed from exposure and was removed to a hospital. Saves IS Lives The same sort of conduct mark ed all ranks. Airman Third Class Rels L. Leming, 22, of 202 South Eight Street) Toppenish, Wash., flung himself into the water and kept right on rescuing American servicemen and British civilians until he was himself dragged un conscious from the icy waters. He was credited with having saved 18 Uves. "It was by far the most horrible experience I have ever had," he said sitting in the hospital bed where he now Is making a good recovery. "We did not have the necessary equipment for that sort of. work. Our air rescue kit was designed for -use out in the ocean but we just had to make the - best of a bad job. "Up to Our Necks- We plunged into the water and waded out, sometimes hip-deep sometimes waist-deep- and some times up to our neck. Tnen we went from wrecked bungalow to wrecked bungalow. put the marooned people onto life rafts or rubber dinghies and held them afloat as we walked through the water beside them. "Some of the English people were rather frightened and did not want to get onto the rafts. One English family was afraid - their children would freeze. "But we got them ashore wrap ped in blankets. - I remember go ing along one line of eve bunga lows. We got everyone out until we came to the last one. then I must have collapsed The next thing I knew was when I woke up In a hospital." The airman who pulled Imlnx onto dry ground when he collapsed Syftipfoony I. J Tiie WITH MARIE R0G!!DAi:i, scprcno;- : . , . SOLOIST : . .'. - Tc::day, Fc!). 3, 0:15 P. tl j TLksfs at Ladi & CytJi Jan. ZD, Through Fsb. S i - On Ss! at lh Doer 7 P. IA. Feb. 3 : " Aai4fCsstrvd-3.CD-CZCD.$l.CD ; . Stassen had been sent to Europe by - President Eisenhower ' "prim arily to listen and to learn and you may i be confident that we ; shall do sa in the most sympathetic spi rit." ! i - "President Eisenhower,", he add ed, "wants to be sure that the pol icies of his new administration will from I the beginning, take account of French views." 1 I " After a quick lunch at the home of U. S. Ambassador James C Dunn, Dulles and Stassen locked themselves up in a conference with ! American government' offi cials in France. . Among them were Dunn,; Am bassador Ellsworth Bunker I from Rome. Samuel Reber, U.S. acting commissioner in Germany: and Ambassador William Draper Jr., UJS. special representative in Eu rope. i .,"!:;' The 1 touring officials dined at Dunn's home Sunday night with American military leaders. Includ ing Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, su preme 1 allied commander- in Eu rope; ! Gen. Alfred Gruenther, his chief of staff, and Gen. Lauris Nor stad, VS. air chief. Tuesday they talk to French leaders, including President Vin cent AurioL Premier Rene Mayer and Foreign Minister Georges Bt dault. -j! thought for a time that he was already dead, there seemed so lit tle lift left in- him. Hero's Mother Succumbed 8 Days Ago ' TOPPENISH. Wash. U) Pride mingled with sadness here Sunday in the home of a young American airman credited with rescuing 18 persons from raging floods at Hun stanton. Eng. "He always had nerves of steel," said the father of Airman S-C Reis L. Leming, 22. "And he never thought of himself In an emer gency." When be learned from an As sociated Press story that his son was a hero, Dewey Iteming asked: "A live or dead one?" Reassured that his; boy was re covering in a hospital from his ex haustina.rescues, the father said he was afraid further sorrow : might have come to his household, Mrs. Leming died eight days ago after a lingering Illness, The Lemings came to this small Central Washington town in 1948 from East St.. Louis. BL, with their son and daughter, now. 14. The boy graduated from high school here in 1948 and attended both Gonzaga and Whitman colleges in this state before entering military service two years ago. : Because of the mother's : recent death, they had been in close touch with the son and knew he was sta tioned in the flood danger area in England. Reis fiancee, Mary Ann Ram sey, a Toppenish girl will leave for. England In June for their mar riage, f Quake Waves -Travel 8 Times Around Earth By ALTON L. BLAKESLEB Associated Press Science Reporter NEW YORK UFi Columhia University announced Sunday a new seismograph has detected earthquake waves that traveled eight times around the earth,' giv ing everyone a little roller-coaster ride each time. i v The waves came from the great quake at Kamchatka, Russian peninsula northeast of Japan, last Nov.;,. .- The rippled the earth's crust re peatedly as they raced around the globe. At Palisades, N. Y., where the seismograph is situated, . the longest wave made the earth move a distance equal to the thickness of a half dollar. r Detection of eight round trips of these earthquake surface waves is a new record. The best heretofore has been three circuits, i :' Study of the way these waves behaved gives new evidence that the earth has a molten core, not a solid one, said Prob. W. Maurice Ewing, director of Columbia's La- mong Geological Observatory at Palisades.. v ..- w ' Prtstnting e Orciiestra. liorea Losts Navy, Marines 1,033 Planes By MTLO FARNETI TOKYO UH The Navy and Ma rine Corps lost 1.033 planes in the first 30 months of the Korean War while spewing more bombs, rock ets and bullets than Navy air ex pended in World War II. Far East Naval headquarters reported Sun day. A summary of combat op erations claimed carrier-based Na vy planes and mainly ground-based Marine aircraft killed or wound ed approximately 100,000 Commu nist troops since the war began June 25, 1950. During the same period, the Far East' Air Forces claimed 144,588 casualties inflicted on the Reds. The Navy said 552 Navy planes and 481 Marine planes were lost through December, 1952 to the Red air force, anti - aircraft suss and in operational accidents. This- was about 300 more than losses announced by FEAF. The latest Air Force summary, issued Saturday, said Communist planes, ground defenses and "oth er causes" accounted for 700 UJS. Air Force planes since the start of the war. The combined Air Force, Navy and Marine losses . from all caus es were 1,733 more than double the 792 Red planes claimed as posi tively destroyed. Other Red Planes This did not take into account. however, more than 9000 Red plan probably destroyed or crippled in air Da rues over Korea. The figures showed Navy and Marine planes flew 210,000 com bat sorties (individual flights) com pared with 588.713 sorties for the Air Force through January. That would make about 2 out of every; 5 planes hitting the Reds either a Navy or Marine aircraft. According to the official figures. the Navy and Marines are losing about 5 to every 2 Air Force planes knocked out. la Accidents The Navy summary listed 471 craft brought down by anti - air craft fire and Red MIGs while 562 were lost in operational accidents. The Air Force reported 101 planes downed in air battles, 491 destroyed by ground defenses and 108 to "other, causes." Planes landing and taking off from bucking carriers have more accidents and navigation problems than those operating from the ground, raising Navy operational losses. Most Marine planes operate from ground bases but are large ly assigned to hazardous low lev el strafing missions over enemy lines,, exposed to Red flak batter ies. The- Navy summary said Ma rine and Navy planes have drop ped 145,000 tons of bombs on the Communists, more than twice the 70,000 tons of shells fired by bat tle ships, ! cruisers, destroyers and other vessels. The air total exceeded the ton nage expended by the Navy air arm in World War II, the sum mary said. Prof. Fulton OfOSCDies CORVALLIS W John Fulton. 83, professor emeritus of chemistry at Oregon State College, died here Sunday after a long illness. Fulton was a member of the faculty for 47 years prior to his retirement in 1940. He was grad uated from Oregon State in 1892 and while a student was a mem ber "of the college's first football team and helped organize the campus newspaper, the Barome ter. The widow, a daughter, Helen Tompkins of Berkeley. Calif., and a - son, Robert, of Silver Springs, Md.; survive. The funeral Is pending. A Bit 01 TmVn-Thai . . L sid Beise This space today Is directed to our farming friends In the Willamette Valley, so. the cliff-dwelling city slickers need read no farther. Wall get back to their problems on some -; future date. v .- : the recent heavy rains and resultant floods remind us that farm machinery Is particularly vulnerable to various types of damage. Insurance rates on farm machinery have recently been reduced and we can now insure it against fire, theft, r flood, perils of transportation, collision, upset and other I typos of losses for $6.40 for each $1,000 of insurance. One y tractor which we . consider- a monument to our fudgment -; was buried under 8 . feet of mud and water not . so long ago with a subsequent cleaning bill of $175.25. This doesnt happen every day, of course, but fust often enough that 'X we thought you ml;ht bo Interested In these new low V rates for this broad form of Insurance. C73 IX. Church Thcno w-"0 j! 3.0 Cedent Th Ccrd Clods Ccrrpcay d Preferred UzksT 20th To Convert; Output Wo 6 3 -Dimension 9 HOLLYWOOD (A Twentieth Century Fox announced Sunday it is . converting immediately to a new photographic and sound sys tem that creates a third-dimension Illusion and indicates changes in the movie industry as revolution ary as the advent of sound. The device, called Cinemascope, permits filming in color and pro jection on a screen two and one half times the ordinary size "so as to give almost life-Uke anima tion to the players," the announce ment said. ; "This creates the same feeling of audience participation as at tendance at a performance by liv ing players on the speaking stage." Projected onto a curved, wide screen it could be 80 feet wide in a big theater like the Roxy in New York City the picture "sim ulates third dimension to the extent that objects and actors seem to be part of the audience." Sound Superforts Bomb Commie Front Lines SEOUL UR Ten American B- 29 Superforts slammed 100 tons of bombs on Communist positions along the 155-mile Korean front early Monday. It was the biggest battle line smash by the great warplanes in a year. Usually only one or two B-29s make nightly bomb runs, across Red front line positions. Mainly the big planes from bases in Ja pan and Okinawa are used for pounding strategic targets sup ply centers, ports, rail hubs deep In North Korea. The Air Force did not announce results of the pre-dawn battleline sweep. It said the- crews reported their only opposition was moder ate Red anti-aircraft fire. Houston Gale Deaths at 5 HOUSTON m The death toll rose to five Sunday after . a sud den, violent thunderstorm lashed the city Saturday afternoon caus ing an estimated two million dol lars in property damage. . An insurance company adjuster said 20.000 homes were" damaged by rain, hail and wind which had gusts up to 88 miles an hour.' One man was electrocuted by a fallen power line and four died in traffic accidents officers blamed on zero visibility at the height of the stornu. Wind blew a frame building eight feet off its concrete block founda tion. A Northwest Houston resident said hail covered his lawn until he could not see the grass. Galveston County Deputy Sheriff Johnny Newsome said, he saw hailstones an inch In diameter near Texas City between Houston and the Gulf. - '''-.'':' ;. - Several homes and buildings were struck by lightning as more than an inch of rain fell In 'one hour. ' ':' New Showing Open6:45 Marge and Gower. CHAMPION "Everything I Have It Yours" William Bolden. Alexis Smith "THE TURNING POINT" George Hoggins ') t J T'" 1 INSURANCE Cen tury ; Fox "moves across the screen with the action." Fox is thus the first major studio to announce conversion to a sys tem of big-screen realism in an apparent effort to combat the home competition of television. Cinerama, currently being dem onstrated publicly in New York City, requires three cameras and three projectors. The new Fox sys tem, the studio says, requires only one standard camera and project or,- with special lenses to create wide-angle scenes. 1 ' The 20th Century-Fox announce ment was Issued jointly by Spyros F. Zanuck, - vice president in Skouras, President, and Darryl charge of production. : - Rights to Cinemascope were ac quired by Skouras from its invent, or, Henri Chretien, honorary pro fessor at the Sorbonne and "at Paris Optical Institute, the an-: nouncement said. Fox's conversion to cinemascope1 ls expected to have an equally revolutionary effect in changing the installations in movie houses throughout the world. ; - '.The first picture to go Into pro duction using cinemascope will be the film version of Lloyd C Doug las' book. The Robe Start of pro duction has been set back to Feb. 16 to permit the realignment of sets to fit the -enlarged scope and new dimensions of the system.", Ten other Cinemascope pictures in color are to follow. The company plans i to demon strate the new process to exhibi tors in about eight weeks with a sequence from "The Robe." . Open 8:45 TJd. o Jennifer Jenes Charlton lies ton ; Karl Maiden "KUBY GENTRY ; .-'! "RETURN OF GILBERT SULLIVAN" Continuous Sterling Harden Jean Leslie "HELLO ATE" t : Joe Sawyer William Tracy "MR. W ALKIE TALKIE" Open :45 PJif. O Richard Wldmark - in Technicolor -"RED SKIES OF -MONTANA" MacDonald Carey - in Technicolor CAVE OF TIIE OUTLAWS" Matinee Daily from 1 pan. ENDS TODAY! "Hurricane Smith" "Because Of Yen" TOMORROW! At Bargain Prices! IYBT . MOVE THET MADE -BECAME "FAIT CfTKI FABUIOUT KKOP AS... 52? WILD! J ffcyStoTHAXTPt Ce-Featare! J jwi urn, , i, ......-v r f f L 4 . ; v TO s