if b in .2 The Statesman, Salem, 'Of, Tu day April 211953 'i;Britons Send Word of Yanks Held by Reds Follies Star MOSCOW I Si British ci vilians and an Irish priest ar rived here Monday, after long in ternment in North Korea. They reported that three Americans held with them during part of their two years and eight months im prisonment had died of illnesses. A spokesman for the group said even other Americans held with them in a farmhouse outside the North Korean capital of Pyong yang still were alive and in ap parent good health when they left there nearly a month ago. The American Embassy' has been informed that, through Soviet good offices granted recently by Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov in response to' a U. S. request, seven Americans soon would be on their way to Moscow on the first leg of their trip home. . Freed PW to Learn Of Father's Death BATHEGATE, Scotland im British Trooper Edward O'Donnell, SI, released by the Korean Com munists in Monday's prisoner ex change, sent a telegram to his father's residence here saying he Was homeward bound. He does not know his father died two years ago, just after O'Don cell's capture. Enda Tonifht Open 8:45 "STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER" And "FARGO" Starts Wednesday, Open 6:45 2- PORTLAND Latest star to join the Ice Follies of 1953 It, Flor ence Jtae, product of Rockefel ler rink, New York. Her routine in "Barbary Coast" involves feats never written into the skating guides.. Ice Show to Be Portland Arena From May 4-17 PORTLAND Matinee perform ances of the Ice Follies of 1953, scheduled for the Portland Ice Arena May 4-17 inclusive, will be given on Sundays, May 10 and 17, at 1:30 and 5:30 p.ra and there will be no night performances on those days, officials announced. Matinees also will be held at 2:30 each Saturday. Tickets are to be available for all performances, matinee and night, at the Capital Drug Store in Salem Saturday, April 25. Wheat Promotional Campaign to Continue PORTLAND UTi A promotional campaign for Oregon wheat .will be continued, E. J. BelL Pendle ton, Oregon Wheat Commission Administrator,' told the Pacific Northwest Bakers Conference Monday. He said this included cake bak ing contests, 'State Fair exhibits and a motion picture being made to show wheat production, mar' keting, milling and baking. . Some 300 bakers attended the opening of the three-day meeting. En Today! (Two.) "Hawaii Calk" A Frelies om loo" OPEN :45 P Jf. STARTING TOMORROW! THIS PICTURE WILL SHOCK YOU THIS PICTURE OXRES TO SHOW THE TRUTH CAN YOU TAXI IT vim fniim a vicious RACKfT IT ARM JUtOURt YOVfc JLM i 333? GGfi o 'fMtilt AS TODAYS HEADLINES H T NO CftlME TOO VICIOUS... NO MANHUNT MORE INTIliC IN TMS. BAT Tit AtfclNtT TV -5 Persons .1 ' ' JS. Under 16 , ' ' KI Not Admitted AQUtTft r I y BOLD CO-FEATURE! When Girls leave Homo For An "ArtistV-life? Should a . 'CC COLOR CARTOON . LATE NEWS ; .. . - . : 1, , ; Gilbert Given 31-Term Charles R. Gilbert, 1 1020 ..N. 16th St, was sentenced to three years in the State Penitentiary Monday in Marion County Cir cuit Court The charge was obtaining mon ey by false pretenses. Gilbert had pleaded guilty to passing a worth less $25 check in Salem in Feb ruary. . T: 4 . The court also heard Ray E3- vin Ehlke, 333 Union St, plead innocent to the charge of con tributing to the delinquency of a minor, on which the grand jury indicted him last month. Trial date was not set aecniirupnr ey Not Fearful of Dep ression Britain Requests Chiang to Halt Fighting in Burma UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. U) Britain urged Nationalist China Monday to broadcast an appeal to 12,000 Chinese guerrillas now fighting in Burma to lay down their arms and accept internment Sir Gladwyn Jebb, British chief decgate, said in the IT. N. As sembly's Political Committee that if Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek has no physical control from For mosa over the guerrillas under Gen. Li Mi, his government at least could make a broadcast ap peal. He said the soldiers should be interned or evacuated. NEW YORK UH Treasury Sec retary George M. Humphrey said Monday there will bo no" depres sion in America, come a Korean armistice or even full world peace. "Adjustments, yes, but not de pression," ho added in his maiden speech as the fiscal weathervane of President Eisenhower's new Re publican cabinet The former Midwest iron ore magnate told the annual luncheon of the Associated Press at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel: "So long as we maintain the soundness of our money; attain that nice balance between achiev ing security from aggression and maintaining economic strength; el iminate waste and handle our fis cal affairs with wisdom, America can look forward to good jobs at good pay and real advances in our scale of living. "We can have a stronger econ: omy based on sounder fundament al conditions than we have known in many years." Humphrey advised the 1,000 ed itors and publishers that "taxes shoulu hot be reduced until ex penses are under control." But he quickly added: "That does not mean that no relief from present taxation which is far too high "can be anticipated. Just the opposite is true. Taxes must come down. It's Ends Today! (Tves.) "JEOPARDY" "Reach for a Star" MATINEE DAILY FROM 1 P. M. STARTS TOMORROW! HI lU!AllUiViUJ 4 IllHMil k Ml v r iv . i U O QtffrA TMAGINATION1' mrnn lU KXMAXDSON Am TODD Nigel PATOOC-Dfoat SKRSaN CO-HITI V ' .- V "t s Tho great Indian ctfisirir fWimts to the screen in all it excitement, 'adventure and romance I ) WMM P ' Vincent EDWARDS Yvette DUGAY Kth LARSZN Crawford to Head Fire Association M. E. Crawford will head the expanded Centrol Oregon Fire Patrol Association, State Fores ter George Spaur announced Mon day.1 He has been in charge of the linn County unit' for seven years. " In his new post Crawford will be district warden with admin istration over 1,100,000 acres of private and public forest lands. F. M. (Red) Henderson has been transferred from the Cen tral Oregon unit to Dallas to take charge of the Polk - Benton tfnit , : W. simpL a matter of timing geared to reduction of expense. Both are too high and both must be reduced. "In addition there must be aH radical revision of our tax system to better provide the incentives for i3 creation of more jobs for more people and for the making of more better and cheaper goods for all the people." Humphrey's luncheon speech came amid a busy day in which Associated Press members voted for six directors of the worldwide news .gathering cooperative. The APs board of directors also reported a fervent hope for free dom soon for William N. Oatis, although they saw no "substantial, discernible progress' in mis direc tion right now. Oatis,; APs chief of bureau in Prague, was jailed two years ago by Czechoslovakia for 10 years on charges of espionage. Mat Daily From 1 P. M. -STARTS TODAY! At Our Regular Bargain Pricesl i 1 sxe vast u. s. arcs aum tiFOHYora toy trot t COFEATURE! 7 ouvu R - & .... . COLOR CARTOON LATE NEWS f Testimony in Police Slaying Case Heard ROSEBURG W The Douglas County Grand Jury began hearing testimony Monday 1 on the fatal shooting by police officers of C D. Burgoyne last Feb. L. ' , Police fired an estimated 1,000 bullets into his cabin. They said he had resisted arrest on a war rant accusing him of threatening an assault; " The grand jury investigation was ordered by Attorney General Rob ert Y. Thornton after he had in vestigated the shooting at the re quest of Gov. Paul Patterson. A group known as the Douglas County Committee for Justice, made up of Burgoyne's neighbors and acquaintances, had asked the investigation. The committee con tended the shooting wasn't neces sarythat tear, ' gas could have been used or, a friend sent in to talk to Burgoyne. : ; - J J 1 Ten; of the 14 officers involved in the shooting testified Monday. Subpoenas have been issued to about! 40 other persons, ' many of them jBurgoyne's neighbors. . 'The jury Is made up of four men land three wopnen. Thornton and his assistant. Howard Loner gan, are conducting the investiga tion. ; What is believed to have been the first "artificial" precipitation was produced in 1946 by spray ing a cloud with dry Ice. . Have Ton Tried the Lnnches : At The DAIICH Dine and Dance . Clyde ' vPeg Aiaiiy noon Cook. 2:30 A. M. - Mgr. 3260 Portland Kd. I I nmvE-iN the n ri Ph. 2- UIISM 6A1DENS. HICUWAT - Gates- Open 6:45 ' ShttW mt 7:30 " Ends . Tonight (Tues.) - t Technicolor Hits -Star and 8 tripes Forever" , - Plus - ' Tlnrrtcane Smith" SUrts Vftd. ROAD TO BALI" -WATER BIRDS" M TIM in 0)f IS Ithis week ! FRIDAY end SATURDAY this week i m ! iivnniDKnKsiHnr oiHin)W kii.y GBORGEOUS v2" t XGLAMOHOUS 'i t "Vfl I rv - tin w ! .-!; r , - I A GET YOUR TICKETS r SEE 22 . l i fcrf" ---iaiiiaii i I'm m w " m mm '5-' la- line mwji uinuual l - r - rMeaasBaaBapaBBaaaaaasaBse , i ' OWN COMING OUT PARTY! - - ilDOLgQ OIIE.Y - - COME AS LATE AS iTwTTnDETREGULAR FEATURE PLUS OUR MIDNITE SHOW AT MIDNITE SHOW PRICE ' salem pbvE Vim imam Labish Gardens on Highway 99 Box Office 'Qpen 6:45 P. M. A Box Office Open 6:45 P. M. K CfiEATlIED A Upill WHO PROMISED 1000 am OF LOVE! is The Grtatesl Advenfor in A8 the Reckku legends of the : - nc:m:;G poniicn ixc:c::t I I 1 Ir I I .. I ' f l,- - I II r ' V', J T- m , ' r --y. , s'ifil co-stomna : ARLENE DAHL RICHARD CONTE j AKIM TAMIRQFF 3? -fait- Midi rr I J CO-HIT! . . . Trading Cafual Kiftes TO ESCAPE THE BIG CITY'S JUNGLESI GIRlS' 1N----THE i;NIGHT: GLENDA FARRELL HARVEY LEMBECK JOYCE f HOLDEN GLEN ROBERTS ADDED! COIOR CARTOON AIRMAIL NEWS 1 1