The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 07, 1953, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 Tna Statesman, Saint,
Live Video Expected From
Portland Soon, Dealers Told
"Live television programming from Portland Is scheduled for
sometime late this month,' 200 members and guests of then Salem
Television Dealers Association were told Monday night by Gene
Ragle, KPTV program director.
Ragle was guest speaker at the dinner meeting of the Associa
tion in the Senator Hotel in place of Russ Olson, station assistant
manager, who was unable to at
tend. Also from Portland was
Miss Jan Webster, public rela
tions director.
One feature of the meeting
was a television demonstration
by the mobile Crosley associates,
directed by A. E. Elgan, a man
ager of the Crosley Corporation
from Cincinnati, Ohio. The
audience was photographed by
Crosley television cameras and
the picture broadcast by direct
hookup on television receivers
in the dining room and through
out the hoteL
As well as technical points of
production relative to Portland
station KPTV, Ragle outlined
some of the features of the
pending live-programming of the
near .future which, in a one-hour
show will include a newscast, a
woman's program, sports and
probably a tour of the studio at
first. "We don't intend to go in
to full scale programming until
we've sounded out the public's
desires as well as improved our
own production abilities," he
said.
GIRLS!
Make Modeling a Career!
Gain Poise - Self Confidence
Complete 10 Weeks Course -National
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JON-MAR STUDIOS
Phone 4-4962 177 So. ComT
Have Yon Tried
The Lunches
At The
RANCH
Dine and Dance
Clyde Open Dally Noon -
Cook, z:3 A. sn.
Mgr. 3260 Portland Ed.
SAVI
HESE DATES
Oregon College of Education
FACULTY PLAY
Monmouth
April 16 & 18
i -.
tj
-7
Sid
Boise
We mot on of our friendly competitors on the street
not bo lone oco. After exchanging "hollo" (we like to
be sociable even with the competition, you know I) he
reminded us of one of our recant ads which told our
readers about the 15 dividend we like to return to
our fire Insurance policy-holders. "You know." he went
on, "When the chips are down, your days are all num
bered, and you would like to enter those pearly gates.
youH find yourself Just 15 short!" '
WeXL maybe so. maybe so. But without setting our
selves up as paragons of virtue, we like to think we wQl
hare a margin of 15 to our credit by that time. In
the meantime, we would like to tell you about that 15
saving you should have to your credit If your property
qualifies. Come in or call us at your convenience. -
373 N. Church Phone 3-9119 Salem
The Capital Stock Company of Preferred Bisks"
It's fun to go to San rranciaco on the "Shasta Daylight". Ton relax.
The engineer , does the driving. Travel through the high Cascade
mountains; around 14461-foot ML Shasta. Coffee shop and dining
ears; colorful Tunberline Tavern car. Giant picture windows. Seats
are foam rubber and reclina easily. Leave Portland any morning
7:45; arrivs San Francisco 11 :15 same night. Convenient connections
from points north and east. Phone Southern Padne or your local
railroad agent for reservations.
Oregon, Tuesday, April 7. 1353
Search for
Pen Guard
Unsuccessful
Continued investigation into
tne aosence of Victor. Harry wu
liams, 40, missing from his home
three days, was pressed Monday
and police admitted nothing had
turned up to suggest reason for
his disappearance.
The State Peniteatiary guard.
who left for work Friday night
and hasn t been heard from
since, has touched off a state
wide search that so far has turn
ed up little more than his desert
ed car in Portland.
The vehicle was found parked
in downtown Portland Sunday
with the key in the ignition and
the doors unlocked.
A hammer handle and a pair
of rubber gloves found in the car
were sent to the state crime la
boratory for analysis late Mon
day as police searched for more
leads.
Officers said the hammer and
gloves would be checked for pos
sible traces of blood.
A damaged wristwatch was al
so found in the car under the
seat, but investigators said this
didn't necessarily mean it was
taken from Williams forcibly.
State police advised they have
a "locate" with each of their pa
trol qars and several special in
vestigators assigned to the case
are tracing any thread of leads
to determine where he might
have gone. Investigators are also
on the job from Portland.
Green Concrete
To Replace Lawn
DENVER UV-Mowing the lawn
at his new home on South Cook
Street will be at the very bottom
of Frank Cowan's list of home
chores.
He is having concrete poured
on 11,000 square feet of front
yard and then will paint it green.
Both Cowan and his wile travel
on selling jobs he with -candy,
she with infants' wear and are
gone from home during much of
the lawn-watering season.
The average person in Ireland
eats about 3,500 calories a day
compared with an average of
about 3,200 in the United States.
v
George .
HVgftBS
INSURANCE
p - .-
-21
TUT - TT
se
Dr. linse as
Test of Reds
By RICHARD KASISCHKE
BONN, Germany (-Ameri
can authorities here Sunday were
reported contemplating testing
the Russians' new conciliatory
attitude by asking them once
again to free Dr. Walter Iinse,
Berlin anti-Communist leader
who was kidnapped last July and
dragged into the Ommxmist
zone.
At least seven times, the Amer
icans have asked Gen. Vassily I.
Chuikov, Soviet commander in
East Germany, or his subordi
nates for Linse's release but
always in vain.
The Russians have either ig
nored the requests or claimed
ignorance of Linse's whereabouts,
and this despite the presentation
of documented evidence that he
was slugged and hustled out of
West Berlin by Communist-paid
thugs.
Mis-Addressed'
When former U. S. High Com
missioner Walter J. Donnelly sent
a Christmas package for Linse
last December, it was returned
marked: "Mis-addressed." Don
nelly then pledged that U. S. au
thorities wonld never stop press
ing for Linse's release..
Linse, an outspoken foe of
Communism who was given to
documenting his charges with
hard proof, was a thorn in the
Russian side.
In Berlin, East Germany's rul
ing Socialist Unity Communist
Party declared the world needs
peace and is looking forward to
proposals aiming at an under
standing between the great pow
ers. Continuation ef Policy
The official party newspaper,
Neues Deutschland, presented
this view in a three-column
front-page editorial which de
scribed recent Soviet moves as
the "logical and vigorous contin
uation of Stalins' foreign policy
of peace."
The paper referred particular
ly to these three things:
1. Chuikov's suggestion to the
Western Allies to discuss ways
and means of avoiding air inci
dents over divided Germany.
2. Chuikov's letter to a Communist-sponsored
West German
group in which he stressed Rus
sia's readiness to take part in a
four-power conference on Ger
many. 3. Soviet Foreign Minister V.
M. Molotov's statement on Ko
rea. "Tension must be relieved in
the international situation." said
Neues Deutschland. "All objec
tive opportunities are given to
day to enforce a peaceful under
standing and the preservation of
peace.'
The editorial omitted the cus
tomary shots at American "war
mongers" but blasted Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer of West Ger
many and President Syngman
Rhee of South Korea as "war
provacateurs."
Dulles Tells
Congress U.S.
Needs Allies
WASHINGTON )-Secretary
of State Dulles told Congress
Monday the United States faces
"the greatest peril in its his
tory" and cannot stand alone,
without allies, against the threat
of Soviet Russia.
Dulles made the statement in
opening the administration's
fight against proposed Constitu
tional amendments to curb the
President's treaty-making pow
ers. President Eisenhower has said
he believes theh proposed re
strictions setting up tight Con
gressional checkreins over pre
sidential pacts with other coun
tries would deny him the flexi
bility he needs for conducting
U. S. foreign policy.
Pin-pointing Eisenhower's ob
jections, Dulles told a Senate Ju
diciary Subcommittee that tne
proposed amendments might
make it impossible for the Unit
ed States to enter a pact to out
law war or control atomic weap
ons. The cabinet official said he
was authorized by Eisenhower
to pledge that the administra
tion will consult congressional
leaders closely on future pacts
with other countries.
GIRL HIT ON HEAD
Four-year-old Linda Smith, of
170 W. Browning Ave., suffered
a puncture wound Monday aft
ernoon when she was struck on
the head with a rake by a play
mate. First aidmen, who dressed
the wound, said it was not seri
ous. FOR
j gj TAX
FROM SALEM
h rastryad sett ce tht strtsmQntf
Try this easy, epentfabla way e the
luxury strtsmnntr varfoat eaa afford.
Antrlca's Msst Medtn Train
wesufiav.u
warn
mmmm
Scaffolding
ft : " r- 1
$ nii gsAss- . i. 'W.-:--tf.tsi
1J
Erection ef a Zi-feet aeexfsUiag
ef moving heavy printing eeelpearat freaa the aeeeasi noer es me
eld Statesman bmtlding te the mew leeatlea at drareh and Cheaa
ekeU Streets. After eeaipanent wae ashed ease the weeden plat
form shew, above, a lift track lowered It te moving vans watt
ing below. Statesman photo.)
Thqy Can't Rush Conrad
i'r. fp&tf : (fx -i - z-yts - -A
ff I I : - vA ' " i
r A-- ir ' - - -' -'"1
' 'J?'
7 'I .
Sitting stubbornly at the spot in
where he has hatched many "comes The uawn- eeiamni is tau
rad Last One Oat Frange. Never one te he poshed, he's at
tempting te sqneese out Jest one more column la the eld building
as movers strip him of desk, ehsJr, typewriter stand. Joke beek
and dignity. (Statesman photo.)
Biddle Asks
Investigation
Of McCarthy
WASHINGTON (IP) Fran
cis Biddle, former attorney gen
eral, called Monday for a Justice
Department invesitgation o f
whether Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis)
unlawfully diverted to his own
use and profit money donated
for his fight against Commu
nists, McCarthy retorted that Bid
dle was a "thoroughly discred
ited" man and denounced his
action as "criminal libel."
Biddle, a Democrat, made the
demand in a letter to Atty.
Gen.t BrowneU. The letter was
signed by Biddle as national
chairman of Americans for
Democratic Action (ADA), and
by Robert R. Nathan, chairman
of ADA'S executive committee.
Biddle and Nathan said in
their letter that the Justice De
partment should investigate
whether- McCarthy "embezzled"
any of the anti-Communist
funds, or violated mail fraud
laws in handling them.
The European corn borer Is
found in 37 states of the United
States.
0SCM
LEVANT
O.S.C. Coliseum
Sal., April 18, 8 p.m.
Prices: S2.00. $130. f LOO
(Including Tax)
Tickets Now On
Sale At WHla
Music Store
AidsMovers
-
?
was the aetatten se the preoiem
r J-
The Statesman's old newsroom
McKay Urged to
Change Standards
For Reclamation
WASHINGTON I The Na
tional Reclamation Association
told Secretary of the Interior Mc
Kay Monday that feasibility stan
dards issued by the Truman ad
ministration last December pos
sibly would wreck reclamation
program in the West.
President C. Petrus Peterson,
Lincoln, Neb., said he doubts that
many, if any, reclamation proj
ects in the West would measure
up to the new standards laid
down in a Budget Bureau cir
cular of last December.
He said he knew the Eisenhow
er administration was not respon
sible for them but asked l com
plete .review of the policy state
ment. An estimated 33 million bush
els of corn in the United States
were destroyed by the European
ACORNS FROM THE
WITH OEL MILNE
"Ladies yen may now make
year reservations for ear
Fashion Shew April 20th.
Luncheon and show will be
SL25 or If yen wish a couple
ef extra frills' which win be
known as the "Deluxe" treat
ment the price will be 91J56.
These Fashion Laateheoas. are
extremely popular la Fert
and In Eugene and I know
the ladies ef Salem and this
cenunnnity will appreciate
them every bit as ranch, j
Why not can your friends
right now and make op a
group or table. It's a mar
velous war to entertain.
Just telephone the Marten
Hotel and say yen want te
make a reservation . for the
Fashion Luncheon, the phone
number Is t-Alit."
J v,,-
Designers to
link A-Engine
1 to Plane's Jets
-WASHINGTON (AV-The first
official explanation of how de
signers, expect . to . harness an
atomic' engine ,to an airplane,
came to light Sunday night with
publication of testimony before
a congressional committee.
..It Indicated the scientists and
ngnmmwm of the Atomic Energy
Commission, Air Force and Na
tional Advisory Committee for
Aeronautics NACA. in at least one
rof the two projects under way;
are linking a nuclear reactor to
a comparatively conventional
component of a jet engine, like
those which propel fighters and
some bombers.
The explanation was given
during a bearing by a House Ap
propriations Subcommittee on a
bill to provide money for various
independent government agen
cies. ,
Dr. Hugh L. Dryden, director
of NACA, the government agency
which does aeronautical research
for both private and military avi
ation was questioned by Rep.
Phillips R-CaliI). ,
Uses Compressor
' He told the committee that:
The nuclear powered engine
for the plane consists of a re
actor replacing the fuel-burning
combustor. but It still uses a com
pressor, still uses a turbine, and
we still have the problem of
heat transfer.
Dryden's break remarks seem
ed to suggest this picture:
An atomic reactor a "furnace'
producing heat from nuclear fis
sion will replace the burning of
standard fuels in an ordinary
jet engine. The extremely hot air
created by the reactor will be
compressed as it is in a jet en
gine, passed through the turbine
wheel also as is done in a jet
engine, and then released in a
high-intensity jet or series of
jets.
Heat Transfer
But, as Dryden pointed out,
there still remains "the prob
lem of heat transfer.
It would be simpler to mere
ly take the heat directly from
the core of the reactor and feed
it into the compressor and tur
bine, but the hot gas from the
reactor core is intensely radio
active. To blow it through the
jet system would menace not
only the crew aboard the plane
but ground personnel in take-
offs and landings. ,
Fed into the jet machinery, it
would make all the equipment
radioactively "hot," apd some un
desirable changes in the metal
structures of the jet parts might
occur.
Grand Jury
To Investigate
Ridfile Death
' The Douglas County Grand
Jury will meet in special ses
sion April 2(J to investigate the
fatal shootingof C. D Burgoyne,
Riddle rancher, by a group of
14 police officers on Feb. 1, At
torney General Robert Y. Thorn
ton announced Monday.
Thornton said he probably
would question witnesses the
first day of the session and then
turn the investigation over to
one of his assistants. The inves
tigation was, directed by Gov.
Paul Patterson at the request of
a Douglas County citizens' com
mittee and upon recommenda
tion of the attorney general
Police officers involved in the
slaying said. Burgoyne was
killed when he resisted arrest on
a charge of threatening a neigh
bor. Officers operated under the
direction of the Douglas County
sheriff. It was brought out at a
preliminary here that Burgoyne
spent three months in the Ore
gon State Hospital prior to his
death and had sent threatening
letters to Douglas County offi
cials. v
With Diagrams Showing You How to Dance with East
YESl You Can B th Bit Dancer VVherever You Go
Good Times and Popularity Can Be Yours
No Obligation Just Fill In Coupon and Mail to .
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Name
Address
:
z
v..
City
Rites f or Alliany
Auto 'Accident . ;
Victim Today;
ItoUian News Service
ALBANY Funeral-services
for Raymond Johnson, 33, Al
bany Route 4, who was killed
Saturday night in a head-on auto
crash, will be held Tuesday at
2 p.m. in the Fortmilier-Fred-erickse
Chapel here.
The Rev. George Huber will
officiate ; with .burial in River
side Cemetery. .
Johnson was killed instantly,
said state police when his car
struck another car driven by
Charles M. Paradis, 28, of Cor
vallis, about one and a half miles
north of Corvallia on Route 20.
Paradis was rushed to a Cor
vallia hospital with facial cuts,
a broken bone in his hand and
chest injuries. His condition was
not serious.
Outbreak, Cattle
Disease Reviewed
PORTLAND CP State agri
culture officials from Oreeon
and Washington met with fed
eral authorities and representa
tives of the meat packing in
dustry here Monday to discuss
an ' outbreak of the livestock
disease leptospirosis.
The disease has been found In
DeaaM O'Connor
Debbie Kc males
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155 S. Llbertr
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Manslaughter
QiargeFiled
ROSEBTJRG' WW Donald S.
Parti n, S3, was named in a man
slaughter charge Monday in con
nection with theh Saturdar rdghf
aeath of William. C. Kelly, 39.
.Coroner Al Powers quoted the
victim's wife as saying Partin "
knocked Kelly down, his head
striking a street curb. Mrs. Kelly
said the two men started argu
ing over a traffic incident. Pow
ers reported. .'
Authorities said they were try
ing to determine whether a head
injury Kelly suffered earlier at
work had any connection with
his death.
cattle herds in nine Oregon and
Washington counties.
Those attending. Monday's
meeting agreed that no embargo
is needed on normal marketing
of cattle which react to tests
for the ailment .
Sunlight often kills or stops
the growth of bacteria.
DJllVE-ltJ TllBlTUE
J 1 hi " Mi
UtUl ftilSIKL nClWAT ff
Gates Open 0:45 ff
Show At 7:15 11'
Ends Tenlte! (Tnes.)
"Because Of You"
Loretta Young
Jeff Chandler
' Plus
"YELLOW 8KY"
Gregery Feck
EBU
Ends Tonight Open 645
"MILLION DOLLAR
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Starts Wednesday Open f :4S
Dennis Morgan
"CATTLE TOWN"
4
Phone 2-7523
77 S. Commercial Street
Salem, Oregon
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