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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 2, 1953)
4 ' 4 ..... . lJIh Statesman. rtesrncn. cfcxlem, Oregon, Mondayr March I.-1353 Midwest Gale Jiles Up Snow. M. - f - Br Tke AsMclated Press ; A storm moving eastward across the Midwest Sunday piled up snow 10 inches deep and left at least four dead from traffic accidents. - Ten inches of snow as Teported In Atchison. Kas., eight in St Joseph, Mo.,, four and a half In Bt Louis and seven in parts of Central Illinois. . , - . Blizzards were reported In WjM oming and Colorado. . The storm driven 'by winds tip to 40 miles an hour, covered a - diagonal area from the Northern Rocky Mountains southeastward through Central" and Southern Ill inois and Indiana, . By Monday morning it was ex pected to cover ail' of Illinois, Ind iana, Wisconsin, Michigan and dip slightly into Kentucky. . Three persons -were killed In . auto accidents blamed on slick highways . in Southern -Wyoming, Northern Colorado and Missouri. Another motorist was killed . in Central Illinois when his auto was struck by a train during the blind ing snowstorm. . Kansas City reported six Inches . of snow on the ground and more falling. Traffic moved at a snail's pace and the rity's transit opera tions as hazardous In all of Mis souri and in the southern half of Illinois. :. . , At St. Louis the storm brought occasional sleet and freezing: rain. State police described road condi tions were almost completely stat . led. -i- ' ; , . - Air traffic was hampered at St. Louis Lambert Field and all oper ations were expected to be at standstill before midnight. In the fringe area of the storm high winds, including some of tor- " cache force struck in Eastern Oklahoma. And widespread rain and snow fell In Kansas. Farmers in the huge Kansas ' wheat belt, where moisture is bad ly 'needed, termed the fall "the '- niHion dollar- snow." " , However, at Topeka. Kas., the weather bureau reported the pre cipitation was not enough to break the drought, L - - Because the tiny Dutch-held Island of Saba 'in the Caribbean rises abruptly from the sea with no harbors, boats are built on top of the mountain and then lowered into the sea. Open 8:45 pja. Dan Dalle? Diana Lynn - In Technicolor -Meet Me at the Fair" - Wayne Merria "Star of Texas" Centin Danny TImdu . Ferry Lee : -ta Teehniealar "JAZZ SINGES" - ; : Jehni Archer SEA TIGHT Open 1:45 pan. CUadette Cibert Cecil B. DeMUle's CLEOPATRA" Rene Delteen TROMBA THE TIGER f MAN" ' Mat. Daily from IP. M. ENDS TODAY! "Against All Flags" A . ' -Hangman's Knot" Toiionnoui At Bargain Prices! IIZkTS A REAL FinSIY! About , JOAN IVANS HOUtO CSSOIA Cofeature! trees whose f - . SAontyl ' j - r l IPmners by -I 'V).N V v.7 " U li - 17, .I'- assaJaBstsfl LONDON Oatraged when men beauty and grace te their annual carnival, these Reading ce-eds carried their pretest te II Downing " rouowea rae imnu emmisiasm St Costumes were selected to add emphasis to the pretest. They dldnt see Prime Blinlster Churchill, for the U. N. effort to halt Com bat they won their point. The French girls cancelled their visit. Feb. 28 the Reading co-eds anppUed munlst aggression In Korea. At the t he glamor for the carnival, proceeds f which ge to fleed victims and children's charities. And the I men are happy because their co-eds looked so pretty when they were angry. (AP WlrephoU to The Statesman.) Oregon Prison ee in Mississippi Jail Oregon State Prison escapee Charles P. Duncan, 39, who walk ed away from the prison farm last August, was reported Sunday as serving time in a Jackson, Miss, jail an a charge of trespassing. Warden Virgil J. O'Malley said he heard that Duncan was some place in Mississippi. He sent a telegram to authorities of that state and a telegraphed reply from Jackson Sunday-led to signing of extradition papers. Duncan was serving time in a jail there on the trespassing charge and had been slated for release March 6. A pris on gtiard will be dispatched to bring Duncan back, O'Malley advised.- ; This made the third Oregon escapee to be caught in two days. Con viet Harry L Little, 34, who stole a state-owned car and drove out ..through the main gate of the prison Saturday afternoon was caught by a guard In a pursuing car after a chase of about 10 blocks. O'Malley explained that Little was caught when he turned off State Street about five blocks west of the penitentiary and then drove into a dead-end street a few blocks north. The guard drove up behind Little and the prisoner surrendered without a : struggle. Ralph A. Ove, 18, who escaped from the prison annex about 11 o'clock Saturday morning, was ap prehended Sunday -as he was hitch-hiking In Springfield, r Fur ther details on page one.) Duncan, who escaped Aug. IS from a bean picking crew east of Salem with another convict, Thomas E. Mclntee, 31, was re ceived at the penitentiary in Feb ruary, 1952, from Benton County to serve two years for. forgery. Mclntee was apprehended short ly after the escape. . RAJAH TO GET TOUGH TAMPA, Fla. JP) Manager Rogers Hornsby let his Cincinnati Reds take it easy Sunday in a short drill but he served notice he d be bearing down on thorn again Monday. . i The Reds win open their spring training exhibition game series next weekend and the Cincinnati pilot also' let It be known that hell expect the players to put out every exiort to "win 'em all." , Now Shewing Open f:4S Victor Matare, Pat Neal Something For The Birds. Cernel Wilde, Steve Cachrasi "Oporarton Secret" HniVE-IN TIIHATUf- Ph. Z-7S29 1AZUX CAUIRL R!3ty ft ' ' Gates Open C:4S Show At till ENDS TUESDAY! In Technicolor The Stars ef King Sefoman's Mines! TEISOIIEa OF ZEKDA : Stewart Granger Deborah Kerr " SSYTULL OFMOOin - Carltea Caryeafa Jan Sterling Escap ,j ri i n . . V tj i ! I f i t Default on English Campus VTH , . V- ":r $, t i BSStU of Reading. England, University Mrs. O'Dwyer Quite Mexico For New York MEXICO CITY IB Sloan Simp son U Uwyer, estranged wife of Dwyer, slipped quietly out of the Mexican capital Sunday, headed for New York and a possible trip abroad. The wife of the former ambas sador eluded newsmen seeking to question her on her future plans. Rumors recently have said : she planned to visit Madrid, Spain. She said once in an interview that she would like to do this, but hadn't definitely decided. , ; O'Dwyer was in Acapulco Sun day on a vacation. The couple now have a Catholie-church-approved separation and a marriage is being studied by the Vatican. Gen. Taylor Confident of . Eighth Army SEOUL tfl Li Gen. Maxwell . Taylor Monday expressed con fidence his multl-nation U. S. Eighth Army could withstand any assault the million-man Communist forces In Korea might launch. The general, in his first private Interview since taking command of the Eighth Army Feb. 11, said his troops were in the strongest en trenched r positions of any army since World War L Taylor said he saw no Immediate end in sight for the two and half year old war. Asked if he had received any in structions from President Eisen hower after the letter's recent visit to Korea. General Taylor smiled and answered: "I am not on that leveL Anv instructions on that level would go to uenerai (Mark W.) Clark IU. N. C Far East commander) in Tokyo.-.-.- ' ,- Taylor said he was confident the allies would win the Korean war. Taylor said: "We are sitting, waiting, and It may take a Ions time but I . am confident that we will win no mat ter how long it takes. The enemy sooner or later will grow, tired." He declined to discuss any of his plans for the future but he did say a landing in force by the Na tionalist Chinese on the' China S A A . uoasx wouia. u it : were a sus tained drive, pull some of the Red pressure off the U. N. forces in Korea. . "- , He said that he always would welcome additional troops from other United Nations. "I am a soldier." he declared, "and no soldier ever has enough." Taylor emphasized he did not mean the allied forces were suffer ing from any lack oc manpower unoer xne present war conditions a Korea. . Presenting ... Rudolph Firkusny Pianist with The Portland Sympliony Orchestra Tuesday, March 3rd Salem High Auditorium ' : TIdctis ti Udl i,'M I 1 1 It invited three French girls te add j South Koreans Repulse Heavy Red Attacks SEOUL W Chinese Reds hurled a savage 750-man attack against Allied lines in Western Korea Sunday night and a front!. SnirirS. . v . eat kr w - causa, uiv uxctua V.xi. m f if m a m f aoiaiers or rour Aiuea nanonstth fun lower House could tonnle .t a i i.i . ai joinea m Diunang tne ansiaugni. some or me Diner ciose-quarcer lignung raged inside the Allied sistent political opponent a "stu bunkers. I old idiot." He anoloidzed almost vtttt n 1 lJ . 1 nn 1 uum uuicu . miuunj rage and a stiff company-sized attack at Capitol Hill on the Ko rean Central Front Sunday but were smashed back by South Ko rean defenders in a bitter 50-min- ute fight. Four lighter Communist punches were tossed at the Central and Western Front lines but each was repulsed by Eighth Army troops. In the air. Allied war planes swarmed over North Korea, pound ing at Red supply networks and troop .concentrations while Sabre jets patrolled the Manchurian frontier. However Communist MK) fighters made no attempt to in terfere, pilots reported. The US. Fifth Air Force said Thunderjet and Marine Corsairs bombed and strafed a Red troop of Pyonggang on the Central Front, destroying two buildings and damaging two more. ; Smoke from secondary explo sions and fires obscured further observation. B-28 ' light bombers, - escorted by Australian Meteor jets, wreck ed a road bridge northwest of the Kaesong on the Western Front. Marine Pantherjets entered roads in Eastern North Korea and other fighter - bombers knocked out 32 troop shelters, two supply and ammunition stacks. Seventh Fleet warships and car rier planes' pounded the Reds ; on both East and West. Coasts J Sponsored by Aaseelated . 8tndenta ef W. V. I Salaa Hlgli Audltorluia March -4:lS P. M, Kescned Z.4S . TJnrea. 1JS Ticket At Stevens Jewelers tnl Bush 14c 1 1 Ml 4 II - es . Backs Regional nse WASHINGTON W Secretary of State Dulles said Sunday that because of Soviet Russia's use of the veto in the United Nations regional defense arrangements ap peared to be i the most practical means for assuring; international security. ' ' '- J ' About 40 nations are now tied together by interlocking . security arrangements i at the . moment. Dulles told the American Associa tion for the United Nations. "We may be going through the back door to reach security but as long as we come out at the right Place It doesn't matter." he said. . In the long run the U. N. assure you that your government under President Eisenhower is dedicated .as far as : it is con cerned to achieve that goal. Dulles told the association, which is composed of organizations which seek to advance the U. JN., that the administration has faith and hope in the United Nations organi zation. " ' Speaking extemporaneously at the opening session of the third national conference of the associa- tion, Dulles said that the American people have undergone two periods of dUssfflusionment about the U.N. The first, he said, was when it failed to live up to the high ex pectations of the San Francisco or- ganizauon conlerence and the sec- h . """rfj ET0.1 most Ufflcult P"00. Dulles added. "Today some . people say let's wind it up," he went on. "that believe represents a definitely mi nority sentiment, he said. remier Faces Censure TOKYO (A Japan's lower House of the Diet, in an unpre cedented move, Monday voted w. . n...M rr,in n .on.rut tt-4 twt was a slap in the face for the I TAvas1H v-rk A mavionn nrom SUiU Am. UU9itlc;uWJ A 1SJU 1J 1 p " I . . . " M m shaky government. i Yoshida Saturday called a per immediately, but the insult pre- I " UllCVWSUktU Sunday tn etniun hfm CARS Mill Uete i Japan r JL ' yow s HERE IS WHAT NEW GENUINE a FORD PISTON RINGS NEW GASKETS . LABOR OF INSTALLING CONNECTION ROD INSERTS (IF NEEDED) , - NEW OIL FILTER ELEMENT pmB'Phbiish , is. Autobiography I PHILADELPHIA Pa. (J! Ben, Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Eve ning Post, said Sunday night the magazine will publish a partial autobiography of CoL Charles A. Lindberg starting In its April 11 issue.. -, ; : , x : i Hibbs said the autobiography. which win be published 'in book form-in the falL will be run in 10 installments and , wilfj cover the famed flier's life up t$ June, 1927, right after ; he flev he Atlantic from New Tork to Paris in the monoplane "The Spirit of St. Lou- Is."- S The- magazine editSr said the flight will be the central part of the story and will Jbclude por tions of Lindberg's writings on his Minnesota boyhood acid life as an early flier and air njail pilot. Lindberg wffl recefye an esti mated SI 00,000 for th series of installments. j Farmer Dips In Jefferltra Bus Depot 'JEFFERSON George William McCoy, 71, a farmVat Marion Route 1, died in a jfferson bus denot Sundav evening a DDarentlv from heart attack, OCording to the coroner. .? He was pronounceMf dead , by Marion County Coro f Leston W. Howell shortly aftec p.m. Investigating state ipolice ad vised that McCoy h$ come Into the bus depot after, days work and told the proprietor his arms ached and he had fe funny feel lng in his chest as theugh he were getting a cold. He tasked if he could lie down for if minute and shortly after he'd retched out he collapsed. Relatives said there was no apparent history of heart disease. Survivors include f the widow, Alice M. McCoy, Marion; five daughters. Mrs. Hazel Lent and Mrs. Fern Darby, both of Salem; Mrs. Ruth Burress and Mrs. Doris Kneiling, both of Foster, and Mrs. Grace Clark, Marion; sons, Albert McCoy. Olympia. Wash.: Glenn McCoy. Oceanlake: Frank McCoy, Prosser, Wash.; Lloyd McCoy, Red Bluff. Calif.: Staff Set George McCoy, U. S. Air Force, Philip pine Islands; Capt. Leonard Mc Coy. U. S. Army in Japan and Joseph McCoy, Marion. Announcement of services" will be made later by the Virgil T. Golden Company in Salem. UUB AND TRUCKS OfLindbersl Regular Prico $56.39... You SAVE $16.44 Offer good from March ItHkrough April 15, 1953 ! SEE YOUR FOQD DEALER Salsm, Orcnon375 Center St. Mm .1. . enter . -". ''$ -. ' : , r- ' Attention on Arab Nations WASHINGTON; (A The Eisen hower administration is reported ready to try a new approach in Middle East policy. It involves paying more attention to - Arab countries and less to Israel. v "Top officials' are reported con vinced this change is necessary if the Western Bloc is to counter vastly-increased 1 Russian pressure mine. area. .- j The new aim will be to treat all Mid-East countries scrupulosuly alike and to avoid any special aid program, or privileges for Israel. Under the Democratic . adminis tration, the United States gave the infant Jewish republic more finan cial and technical aid than all the Arab states combined. A total of $229,516,000 in loans. grants and credits was extended to Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Iraq and Hashemite Jordan in the last sev en ears. In four years alone, Israel was allotted a total of $276,517,000. much of It in the form of grants appropriated by Congress. Congress, which traditionally has been partial to Israel, could possi bly upset the new policy before it even gets started. Sen. Taft (R Ohio), among others, has been an enthusiastic advocate of aid to Is rael in the past. This could lead to a clash with" ton administration officials, includ ing Secretary of State Dulles who is known to believe the past Demo cratic policy toward the Mid-East was all wrong. But, responsible officials who hope to translate the new policy into action believe they can per suade Congress to view the Middle East in terms of the whole region and not Israel alone. i Their argument will go some thing like this: Russia has. started a major po litical and propaganda offeisive to win over the Arab nations and possibly grab off the rich oil fields of Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait along with the strategic Suez area. The best hope of thwarting this plot is to put new drive into the West's stalled plans for creating a Middle East defense alliance which includes most Arab nations. This will be virtually impossible as long as the Arab nations con tinue to believe that American po licy win always be heavily pro IsraeL To prove this is false and to persuade Arab states to spurn Rus sia's overtures, it must .be neces sary to treat all Middle Eastern states impartially and to avoid special relationships with Israel. WHAT A I ONLY ?3H J YOU OIL LINES CLEANED t OIL PANS CLEANED NEW MOTOR OIL CARBON REAIOVED AIR CLEANER CLEANED AND OIL RENEWED (Mo) ' lUl'.-.tlftrt a Aulas Truck Loses Wheel A California produce truck driv-: er was worried Sunday; night when his northbound truck lost a right rear trailer wheel ! about three miles south of Salem, but tne venicie caani up over. The driver, who chose to remain anonymous, said be was wheeling bis Modesto Truck Lines - diesel north travelling down a steep hill south of Salem when , he noticed the wheel bounce across the high way, lie slowed the heavy diesel truck and trailer carefully and came to a stop on a shoulder of the highway overlooking about a 12-loot drop-off. "W might have salad when 1 get back," he told city police after he'd bitch-hiked Into Salem and called a tow truck . from head quarters. State police advised that the truck didnt roll off the high way. The driver said he was head, ing for Tacoma, Wash. Washington U. s Quartets FOREST GROVE tfl The Vai sitones, a quartet of University ot Washington students, won first prize in the seventh annual ban bershop ballad singing contes which concluded here Saturda) night. , - ; j; , Members of the quartet an Clyde Hob b s, Jimmy Iddings Merv Clements and Jim McQeea The seven other quartets thai . gained the finals, finished in thil order: i Kord Kings of Everett. Wash.r Forcep Four of the University a Oregon' Medical School; Singini Figs of Moscow, Idaho; Forte Foul of Vancouver, Wash.; TekeTones of Pullman, Wash.; Gay Blades oi Vancouver, and Five Foot Four, Vancouver. " The winning quartet - receives! $300 and the remaining groups di vided $700. THERE IS $55.00 IN THE JACKPOT. To prepare for; this t we nse seme care, -' . It helps if you're rgnized( Some equipments-above all the proper pan, ' If perfection is ta be realized." "WHAT'S COOKIN' AT NOHLGREN'S? " Tonight At 6:30 P. M. GET ! Top BARGAIN O. ftj. 7 P. M. Mch 3rd .1 Ow All Scats H:::rv:d 3.00 . 2.00 1.00 7 1 ' mm