. i
i
- I
j, 1 Tho Sicrtosmcn. dcdonu Orew
;v Bairy Products
Prizes Given
vln 4-H Contest
...... -e
vT' CORVALLIS Conclusion of the
l-v- two-dar 4-H annual butter, cneese
' atuflcm cream ' potnpetttlon
highlighted Thursday evening by
' announcement , o . winners., and
v ' presentation of awards at the con-
r." ventioa banauet
r The competition was sponsored
by the Oregon Dairy Industries.
h Sweeostakes winner of the 1953
butter competition was Marshall
Kc Morris representing the Farmer's
j? vCooDerative Creamery in McMinn-
ville with score of 85.2. Run-1
ti- ner-up nonors wem to joren x-a-i
Jund, representing: Curry's Dairy
t , in Salem, with a score of 85.
,i . Among the other; butter com-
wpetition winners were G. BrandU,
Dallas' Creamery with 93 points,
and Victor Mauer, Mt. Angel Co
' op Creamery, 92.5. These two com
ijpeted In the senior fresh butter
class 1.
In the open fresh butter class
2. Oscar a. Sampson, Farmers
Co-oo Creamery. McMinn ville.
- ceived 95.73 points. The Class III
w (stored butter) included Marshall
Morris again scoring 95.13.
. Cheddar cheese competition was
broken into three subdivisions and
local winners were: Fresh class,
C. A. Hutchlns, Ore town Cheese
O Factory, 9450, and. John Frank,
Mt. Angel. Co-op Creamery, 92.5;
axed class. John H. Powers, Cen
tral Cheese Association, 93.53, and
cottage cheese class, A. J. Fischer,
Dallas Creamery, 93.
.Point winner in the chocolate
: i Ice cream class was Clarence Bur
i dick, Valley Maid Dairy, Sheri
dan, with 925 points.
Authorized
Appointment of "committees to
study administrative problems
highlighted the Marion County
Planning Commission meeting Fri
day.
Study of financial and personnel
needs, and consideration of wheth
er the county should have its own
: staff or a joint one with the Salem
planning and zoning commission,
.will be made by Fred Schwab, Mt.
Angel; Orrille Herrold, Stayton,
ana Kay smitn, St. Paul.
A constitution and by-laws-will
be considered by Kenneth E.
Brown, district attorney, and Ho
mer Goulet Jr., Brooks.
FTJg CHASE COURTHOUSE
HOOD RIVER UR The Com-
. mercial Bank ' of Oregon, having
Ttnpieted purchase of the Hood
River County Courthouse, plans to
open a branch here May 11.
' ADMINISTRATOR'S KOTICX
' Notice ta hereby given that tb un-
secraema naa oeen appointed aamin
" atrntor oi tte estate of Alfred
.Zweiacber. -deceased. 'by an order made
-ot enUred oo October 34th. 152. by
ue Honorable Bex Kimroel. Judse of
tbe Orcwit Court of Marion County.
Ore. AB persons having claim
aaint aald ostal are required, to
' preaent them, duly verified. to the,
nidJi artmmirtratoc at aaid ee-
tate at Keom 4M. Pioneer Truat Build
in. Salem. Oregon on or before atx
eaoaUta from the date of the first
pwbUcaton f this notice.
LESLIE HOSTETLXH
' Administrator of the estate
of Alfred Zwelacher, deceased.
William H. Trindle
Attorney tor Administrator
Feb. 14. XI. 38. Mar. 1. 14.
- DilllCE r
TOIHGIT"
Crystal Gardens
Modern & Old Time
Music by Pop Edwards
74
A
Old-Time
Every
Sahjllinli!
Over Western Auto
253 Court SL
DICTS OBCHESTHA
Adm. 60c Inc. Tax
au:.isviiie -:
paviuo:;
DANCE
Every Sat. Kite Ten
Miles 3. East ef Salem
" I Music By
. IYLE AND HIS
WESTESNAISES
Broadcast KSLM
7:15 te 7:45 P. IS,
Zoning Study
ronoinvooDs f
I Dance Every Sat NIte
- . TOWMY KTZ21AII
II , And Km
K West Ccsst '-'I
If Prwwwn ' " II
II i , . aM...w.vi II
l' A new maple fleer fee II
: -.yew daateios pleaanre. -
V , Daadng te tWt " Jj
gulurduyv robrnarT 21. 1853
Landscape Architect'.
Hired for Bush Park
Arthur. W. Erfeldt, Portland.
lanadsscape architect, has been
hired by Salem to design the lay
out of Bush Park it was reported
Friday, i .
i Erfeldt met with the aty Park
Advisory Board Thursday - night
and heard their views as to how
the park should be designed for
use and activity. ... .. ---
!He Isexpected to present
landscape jplah at the; board's next
meeting.
Pressure Tank
Being Tested
An unflred pressure vessel of
special design and more than twice
as powerful as any ever built in
Oregon has just been completed
in a Portland foundry under su
pervision of the state labor de
partment, Frank W. Smith, chief
of the department's pressure ves
sel technical staff, revealed Fri
day.
The .vessel has been shipped to
an undisclosed experimental sta
tion in the midwest, he said.
Smith said his technicians were
called in by the Portland foundry
several months ago to help with
construction of the vessel so it
would conform to the safety code
of the American Society of Mech
anical Engineers. It Is the duty, of
Smith's department to shop-inspect
all completed boilers and pressure
vessels manufactured m Oregon
for conformance with this code.
This vessel. Smith said, present
ed problems to his staff due to the
type of material used and the use
for which the vessel was planned.
The vessel can stand a pressure of
2500 pounds to the square inch
and is built to absorb sudden
shocks. Ordinary working pres
sures range from 15 pounds to a
high, of 1500 pounds. Smith said.
Smith said that because of the
chemical composition and physical
properties of the new type of steel
used in the vessel's construction.
special welding procedure had to
be formulated.
Teamsters
To Fight Milk
Delivery Plan
PORTLAND (V The Teamsters
Union said Friday it would oppose
alternate-day delivery of milk to
stores.
t The alternate-day delivery pro
posal was made daring a State
Board of Agriculture meeting by
Wayne Laird,a representative of
the Oregon Independent Retail
Grocers Association. He said
would reduce handling charges
and might permit stores to sell
milk for less than is charged for
home deliveries.
Franis Oderman, business agent
for the AFX, Teamsters dairy em
ployes local, said the union was
opposed to such a change.
: He also declared the practice of
some stores taking curb delivery"
of milk would have to cease, "be
cause the clerks are taking work
away from us.
Oderman declined to discuss the
matter further, saying it was
problem for each of the mCk dis
tributors to nanrtie with the union.
TT
7
2
1
Ends Tonight ; Open
T.ure of The WJldi
And
"No Holds Beared
Starts Sunday
Adm. Adults 1.M
Cent. 1:43
Children &
fho greotest love
story you hov
ever seen filmed
ogaimt the most
- odventoroos
backdrounds
an ine wona , - . -t- -
today j
r -
i - ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S
Li TECMMCOtOe .2Ql
arsotr . " sssm - trt
FECK HAYWARD GARD;;m
mm saKGMQSi ROT ue
HoUrwood Eds Matinee
Today l.C te - 4e PJI.
5 CAHTOONS SEHIAL
Special Matinee Feature
"Rebecca c.
Sunnybrook Farmar
j Shirley Te pie
Also
Benson's EMhdar Cake
far
Tern James. Pattie Treltsch, Al
exander Stein. Sandra Tretl.
Keith BTenran. David Kehrstaav
Jmmm Sehaffera. Rhea Hetaherev
Harea Eacewich, Jaxlst Eras
ueta xasser -Jen : xihaca
Cherrle TVaaer. Behbv Olsen.
aVcnm Aadersoo. Xte Ieetald
sen, ari Adams, Ilsry E3ein
Carl Creaa, Csry Criers, La
anne 2am wait, Pat - Hereto
ey V, arreav uemua jay. ;u
o i hp
apeciai-ilype
little Chance
Of Sabotage
At AEC Works
YAKIMA U A forum of 53
Yakima Valley civic and business
leaders was told here Friday that
the -chances - of danger resulting
from "a disaster at the Hanford
Atomic works, either by. enemy
attack or. sabotage, were "dossA-
ble but most extremely imnrob-
abje." -
David Fv Shaw, manager of th
Hanford plant, m discussing-the
basic elements of atomic energy
to the f brunv sponsored by the Ya
kima Republic and Herald, v. is
emphatic in pointing out that any
danger was strictly improbable.
He said there were control de
vices In operation at the Hanford
worxs wnicn were never Known to
the industrial world before.
In discussing the dangers which
conceivably might arise, Shaw said
slow disintegration of one of the
atomic pues was most to be feared
but he again -cautioned that such
an event was very remote.
If a pile disintegrated slowly.
Shaw said. the. radioactive' gases
released could be swept along the
ground, by surface winds. In rapid
disintegration, an explosion, for in
stance, Shaw continued, the gases
formed in the process would be
sent high into the air, away from
contact with ground life.
Shaw said he planned to make
more appearances before selected
groups of city and business officials
in Central Washington.
He said his talks, the first of
their kind since the Hanford plant
was established in 1943, were an
outgrowth of the recent clearing of
the secondary area of the Wahhike
Slope north and east of the a tome
plant for irrigation by Columbia
Basin project waters.
He said the Wahluke control
zone, a section of the slope lying
adjacent to the plant, would be
provided with an audible warning
system to warn residents m the
event of danger arising at the
works.
Invasion Area
Buildup Eyed
By Nationalist
By SPENCER- MOOSA
TAIPEH (AV The premier of
Nationalist China is spurring offi
cial action to buDd up the more
than 30 Nationalistheld islands off
Red China as staging points for
Invasion of the mainland.
Premier Chen Cheng held dis
cussions this week with Finance
Ministry officials but gave no hint
as to when such an invasion might
be expected.
He described the islands both as
bases for a counter-offensive and
as a screen protecting Formosa.
The need for such protection was
pointed up by a Central News
Agency report that 25 Russian
built planes landed Feb. 10 at Han
kow on the Yangtze River.
The report said that bombers In
the group were manned by Ros
si ana and the fighters by cixin
Reds trained in the Soviet Union.
The same agency disclosed a raid
Feb. 12 by 400 Nationalist guer
rillas on the South China town of
Linping. 155 miles northeast of
Canton.
Th agency said the raiders.
CQNT. SHOWS SATURDAY A SUNDAY
S'OElOEfOu!
sJ2
.DnlTontfs Cc2 : ?:.-';
Bonus Claims
.X
Georre A. Jones (right), new supervise ef the bonus dhriaiom ef the
Stale Department ef Yeteraa
uhnkliiar mm ef the
Ta data, his eiTice has
and Is new dewarte claims needing addlttenal tnmntauen er eneex-
lag. (Staieaaaan Fheie.) .
Salem's Hi-Y
Groups Elect
New Officers
Names of ne wofflcers of five
Salem m-T dubs were revealed
Friday following tabulation of bal
lots made at club meetings Wed
nesday.
A sixth group, the Harrison El
liott Club, win elect officers soon.
New oofficers of the five clubs
include:
Arthur Cotton Club Paul Beck,
president; Jim Person, vice-presi
dent; Jim Boudreau, secretary;
Merritt Linn, treasurer; Jerry
Gregg, sergeantt-arms. and Ed
Castilla, ferfle".
Abel Gregg Club Herb Triplett.
President: Dick Simpson, vice-
president; Fred MInifie, secretary
treasurer; Philip Burkland. ser-
geant-at-arms, and Bob Griffin,
chaplain.
Claude Kells Club Pete Phil
lips, president: Bill Shepard, vice-
president; Ralph Sippell, secretary-
treasurer,,, and . uiff stes, ;
geant-at-arms.
J. R. Mott Club Sill Donaldson.
president; Bill Cook, vice-president;
Dan Newberry secretary;
and Dick Main, treasurer.
A. A. Stagg Club Wayne Erick
sen, president; d Robertson,
vice-president; Wayne Carr, secretary-treasurer,
and Dave Tom,
sergeanttrms.
swooping down from mountain
hideouts, killed or wounded more
than 40 Reds, including a battalion
commander, deputy regimental
commander and company
mender. The raiders destroyed an
administrative office and two rice
depots.
Xirsl
Shomcg tl
.v C; .fii w-r e.Ul' ;
Still Working
Affairs, and Mrs. Samuel Carpenter
renaming laee wnpaJd an
ra4e sheet 1X5.M tones psyaaes
NATO Seat
For Germany
Eyed in Talks
LONDON m A high British
government source said Friday the
United States and Britain have dis
cussed the possibility of bringing
West Germany into the North At
lantic pact if the European, army
project collapses.
The issue will be reopened, the
informant said, when Foreign Sec
retary Anthony Edanscheduled to
sail shortly for New York and
Washington, meets President Ei
senhower and 'Secretary of State
Dulles.- j ..
The British and U. S. leaders, it
was indicated, will cuscusS con
fronting France with solid Anglo.
American support for Germany
participation in NATO unless the
six-national army plan succeeds.
France drew up the plan for the
one-uniform European army and is
the key prospective member, but
got cold feet with the approach
of the possibility of actual rearm
ament of Germany, her traditional
foe.
Officers Promoted
With Air Reserve
T Two new promotions announced
Thursday increased the staff of the
9414th Volunteer Air Squadron, 773
Airport Rd.. by two captains.
Promoted from first lieutenant
were .CapU Harold C xentx, 739
Marina Dr., and Capt. Lloyd A.
Taylor. Suverton. Lentz is -a vet-
in of World War a fighting in
north Africa and joined the VAR
Squadron in April, 1852.
Taylor served as a pilot In the
European theater during World War
n and has been a member of the
local squadron since January 1832.
I Ends Today! (Sat)
Marilyn Monroe "TOAGABA"1
STEPS NORTH
Ilcrihwedi
Dcgiihr Prices!
' Is bottle ...wte
fA744-fe
WaVasteolaetel
efl love stories! :
; ; c-ndCcipaaT
v-
Night Raiders
Blast Reds in
Mliea
' By FORREST EDWARDS
SEOUL UD American night-
flying bombers rained new destruc
tion on Communist Korea early
Saturday in still another round of
punishing raids highlighted by the
heaviest Superfort attack of 1 the
year..
j On the ground. Allied soldiers
moved out into no-man's-land in
the T Bone Hi3 sector of Opera
tion smack fame and blocked a
400-man Chinese force as it was
slipping up for a surprise predawn
attack. .
They fought off Reds on both
sides of the hUl mass in a three
hour . fight that thundered and
crumped with artillery and mortar
fire and crackled with machinegun
and small arms fire, traded fre
quently at close range.
Eighteen Okinawa - based B-29
Superforts smacked two. sprawling
military bases in the Sopo area
near Pyongyang with 180 tons of
bombs. -
Twelve hit a 155-ecre troop and
supply center on the main line to
the battle front. Spotter aircraft
had reported build - up activity
there in recent days.
-Six other Sunerforts blasted a
35-acre supply area just to the
southwest. .. i
While the Superforts were roar
ing over the Red Korean capital
area, lighter B-28 bombers turned
a key military installation in the
nearby Chinnampo area into a
raging inferno.
Other B-28s hunted down Com
munist transport all across the
peninsula. The Fifth Air Force said
its airmen destroyed 123 Red
trucks carrying supplies to the
front.
The Chinnampo raiders were
credited with 90 per cent covers ea
of their target, a troop center. Pi
lots said the brilliant explosions
and raging fires 'mushroomed out
of their bomb hits.
Relentless, air raids virtually on
a 24-hour basis through much of
February have turned Red bases
into smoking ruins and have de
stroyed or damaged 39 Communist
MIG jets.
PLAN BIRTHDAY PARTY
PENDLETON (J) Umatilla
Reservation Indians opened their
traditional three-da Waahinfftnn'a
Birthday party Friday night A
war dance, non-belligerent these
days, was the opening event.
CRUSHED BY TRUCK
EUGENE (J) A dump truck
body slipped from the truck and
fatally crushed Guy Stimson, 52,
uxenwood, Thursday. He had been
cutting bolts from the bodv in a
repair job. ,
WATER PROSPECTS GOOD
WASHINGTON UB The Ree.
lamafdon Bureau reported Friday
that heavy January, rains and
snow-melt "aenerallv increased
prospects for a good supply of
water for crops during the coming
irrigation season" though drought
states.
Matinee Daily From 1 P.
STARTS TOIIOnOOU!
7WE GREATEST
GUNFIGHTGC1
OF THEM ALL
call mo that-,
and they curso my
nemo and
thoy wait for t
ine in the- ,
oarx our
IVo never shot
i a man who
didn't
descrvo it!..
tow n
mmmm
r.oa:
cainTi
Hi? njojc O
: irjc:::a
Geimany" Agrees t
To Repay Jewo
BONN. Germany (JJ West Ger
many's agreement to make resti
tution to the Jews for Nazi perse
cution asuy won its Srst test la
Parliament Friday. : i
By unanimous vote, the upper
house (Bundesrat) approved the
agreement to pay Israel the equiv-
alet of SZ2 million dollars and sent
the agreement tot he lower house
(Bundestag) . for action.
Eisenhower
Denounces
Yalta Treaty
Br JOHN M. HIGHTOWER
WASHINGTON UB - President
Eisenhower asked Congress Friday
to join him in denouncing the rulers
of Soviet Russia for subjecting free
peoples to totalitarian imperialism
"in violation of the clear intent
of World War II secret agreements
such as at Yalta.
He sent to the Capitol a proposed
resolution proclaiming the hope
that captive peoples- shall again
enjoy freedom "in accordance with
the pledges of the Atlantic Char
ter.'r -. ""! :
The Atlantic Charter, agreed
upon by President Roosevelt and
Prime Minister Churchill in Aug
ust. 1941. called among other
things for the right of all peoples
to self-government.
The denunciation - contained in
the resolution . Eisenhower ; sub
mitted was turned entirely against
the Russians and their violations of
agreements with the United States,
It avoided pointing the finger of
blame at previous. Democratic
presidents for having 'entered into
such agreements as Yalta and Pots
dam in the first place. ;
This represented an apparent
change in position from that an
nounced by the President in his
State of the Union Message; Feb.
2. - i - t
He said then he would ask Con
gress to make clear that the United
States recognizes no commitment
"contained in secret understand
ings of the past with foreign gov
ernments which permit enslave
ment of foreign peoples. This was
taken as a rap at the Yalta Agree
ment especially. This pact, signed
by President Roosevelt, granted
territorial and other concessions to
the Russians to induce them to
enter the war against Japan.
The resolution submitted Friday
contained no criticism of the Yalta
Agreement, but was directed
against the Russians on the ground
that they violated it -j
Responsible officials said the
shift represents - a decision by the
administration, including Secre
tary of State Dulles, to deal with
the issue of secret agreements as
a foreign policy problem though
it arose primarily as a domestic
political question. j
EUsennower ana . jjuues nope
thereby to(l) throw the spotlight
on Soviet misdeeds of the past and
(2) get Democratic as well as Re
publican support in Congress for
the resolution. I. .
Ends Today
(Sat) !
MAN BEIUNTJ
THE GUN" A
"SCOTLAND
YARD I
INSPECTOR'
SL
JULIA
' - -
- .... -TV '
f s
IIUDS0H ADAHS
LAncnnr ei Evnrr cuhve!
&v
ASt
AMA Stutiiea '
Plan to Raise
FS A Ranking
CHICAGO UP) The American
Medical Association announced
Friday that its policy-making body
will hold an unprecedented meet
ing m Washington March 14 to
study any proposed reorganization
of the Federal Security Adminis
tration. ,
The AMA said It has invited
President ' Eisenhower and . Sen.
Robert A. Taft to appear before
the bodythe house of delegates
of the AMA.
In announcing the special meet
ingthe fourth in the 106-year his
tory of the AMA and the first
scheduled anywhere but Chicago-
the AMA said in a statement:
"The AMA understands -a pro
posal is underway to raise the fed
eral secirity administration to
cabinet level. y
"Since the association is vitally
interested in many of the health
activities of the FSA.. it is calling
a special one-day meeting of its
house of delegates in Washington
to give careful consideration and
study to any proposed reorsaniza-
rtion of the agency."
Gates:45-Shew7:15
Yen We Are
Open!
' In Technicolor -TRON
MISTRESS"
Alan Ladd
Virtinia Maye
v la Technieoler
Plus
"YANKEE
BUCCANEER
; Jeff Chandler
Seott Brady
CkA iCt-Wt i-xit tJL
Hoy Kids!
The Final
Chapter of
-Capt. Video'
"Ways
Tcdayl
- At Noon
- PrizesI
Certoonsl
Don't Miss IH
twenunaoas
Stewart Granger
- In Teehnieeler -
"PRISONER OF -ZENDA
Richard Conte
In Technicolor -"THE
HAIDERS"
Cent. Sat A Sen,
ENDS TODAY!
TAN CIS GOES
"FRANCIS GOES TO
"FLAME OF ARABY
Tcncrrov!
i
)
SUUN CASOT
LAFF CO-IIITI
nlEflljnl.L'l.nlt.":rJ
If
r: :
t -
t '. 3" '