The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 06, 1953, Page 6, Image 6

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    C Tkm Statesman Salem,
U.$y Envoy, Rhee
Mold 9th
By SAM SUMMER LIN
SEOUL (President Eisenhower's special envoy and President;
Syiigman Rhee met secretly again Monday in their ninth effort to
Iron out critical U. ' S.-Sonth Korean differences on a Korean;
armistice. -
During their one hour. 40-minuU session. Gen. Maxwell D.
Taylor conferred with his top men in the Republic of Korea (ROK)
Mrs.Krehbiel,
88. Pratum
-
Resident. Dies
Mrs. Christina E. Krehbiel, long
time resident of the Pratum com
munity and late resident of 1033
Cross St-, diedS early Sunday at a
Salem Nursing Home. She was
88 years old.
Mrs. Krehbiel was born in Don
nelson, la., Dec. 20, 1884 and re
sided there until 1908. She was
married there to ValJ. Krehbiel
who died in 1936.
The' Krehhiels moved to Pra
tum in 1906,; farming for a time
and later operating the general
tore at Pratum from 1914 to
1945. Mr. Krehbiel was postmas
ter there until his death when the
post was taken over by his son.
Mrs. Krehbiel was a lifelong
member of. the Mennonite Church,
being a member of the Mennonite
Immanual Church of Pratym for
44 years. She remained active
and in good health until a few
months ago.'
Surviving are five daughters,
Mrs. Delia Stewart, Mrs. Ruth
Humphreys, Mrs. Hulda Lichty,
all of Portland, and Mrs. Leona
Taylor and Mrs. Bertha Eof I , both
of Salem. Two sons, Carl A. and
Adolpfc, both of Salem, preceded
her in death. She was also sur
vived by eight grandchildren and
14 great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m. from the Vir
gil T. Golden chapel with the Rev.
J. M. Franz officiating. Interment
will follow in Pratum Mennonite
Cemetery x
Polish Reds
Deny Story of
'Emergency'
WARSAW ( The Polish press
d-ap Vtrnatoact a ffnvprn-
. mistu Cuiwlav niefht
denying flatly that any emer
gency measures have been taken
in Poland.
The agency said there was no
basis for reports by certain West
German newspapers that a state
of emergency curfew had been
proclaimed in Poland.
Within the last few 'months no
sensational changes have taken i
place in Poland, the communique
said. Informants saidthat condi
tions hve been calm, that no un
usual measures have been taken
and none are foreseen.
The West Berlin paper Telegraf
said Saturday night that martial
law had been declared in the Si
lesian industrial area of Poland
and in Warsaw and Crakow. The
report said that alarmed by
spreading riots the Russians had
rushed armored troops to the
Polish border and that Polish par
tisans had blown up 17 tanks.
Similar reports have been re
ceived from East German refu
gees. These reports were never
confirmed officially by Western,
Allied or West German authorities.
Lake Grove GI
Saves 5 Lives
In Korea War
WITH THE 40TH U. S. INFAN
TRY DIVISION. Korea i Throw
ing grenades, the wounded young
patrol leader raced through a hail
of machine gun bullets and des
troyed a Communist machine gun.
4 mnA ite thr.m9n rrir
Ti Z , 7 , i
Lt Charles F. Bamford II, Lake
Grove. Ore., was credited with sav
ing the lives of five other Ameri
cans on patrol with him recently
and recommended for a high mili
tary award.
Assigned to locate the enemy on
a strategic hill on the Eastern
Front. Bamford led his 'patrol to
the Red sin trench. Red machine !
guns opened fire, and hand gren
ades bounced at the patrol.
One renade ripped Bamford's
hand. The young lieutenant rushed
at the machine gun, hurling hand
grenades. One scored a direct hit.
knocking out the gun and killing
its crew.
Bamford. with two other men,
moved through the trench. They
kPIed seven more Reds with gren
ades.! Bamford stopped advancing only
when his company commander,
fearing the patrol would be cut off,
ordered him to stop.
- He is a member of Company K,
223rd Infantry "Regiment.
Oregon, Monday, Wt 1953
Session
, Army corps.
There was no official indication
of any connection between the U.S.;
Eighth Army commander's mili
tary huddle and the conference at
Rhee's mansion.
i However, there has been consid
erable speculation about what the:
ROK Army would do if the U.N.'
Command signs ah armistice with
the Communists without Rhee's ap
proval. He has threatened to fight
on alone, and try to drive north
ward to the Yalu to unify his divid--ed
nation.
Red Radio Basy
Before Monday's session between
Rhee and Walter S. Robertson, as
sistant secretary of state for Far
Eastern affairs. Red China's offi
cial radio appeared busy trying to
widen the differences between,
South Korea and the U.N. Com
mand. The broadcast prompted speculation-in
Seoul that the Reds were
hinting they might sign a truce with
the U.N. Command regardless of
Rhee's objections. . (
An expected meeting between the
two Sunday failed to take place.
Instead, Rhee told Associated Press
Correspondent Bill Shinn he did not
know whether the deadlocked talks
with President Eisenhower's emis
sary would succeed.
Opposes Agreement
"I am trying to dear up misun-.
derstandings," said the president.
He has adamantly opposed a truce
agreement which would end the
fighting with Korea still divided.
Meanwhile, Peiping Radio for
possibly the first time in three
years of Korean warfare had al
most kind words to say about the
United States.
The broadcast Sunday night
heaped scorn on Rhee and spoke of
"the spirit of independence and
democracy of the American peo
pie."
Reverses Tread
These were strange words from
Peiping which usually calls Amer
icans "war mongers" or worse.
Omitted from the Peiping broad
cast was its usual acid charge that
the U, N. and the U. S. especially
"connived" with Rhee in the mid
June mass escape of 27,000 anti
Red North Korean war prisoners'
B.ut Monday the Red station re
turned to its customary slighting
reference to American practices
and purposes. Quoting a Commu
nist Chinese newsman at Kaesong.
the North Korean headquarters of
Red truce negotiators, the radio
said:
"Observers point out here that if
ln
American government really
wants an armistice in Korea it must
take all measures' to deal with
and prevent the criminal actions
of the Rhee clique to undermine
the powef agreement and obstruct
the armistice."
The Kaesong dispatch said that
"it is clear that anyone who sup
ports Syngman Rhee is world pub
lic enemy No. 1." ;
Shell Powder
Blast Shakes
Chicago Area
!
CHICAGO UP Post Fourth of
July fireworks rocked Chicago's
northwest side Sunday night when
a store of 120 . mm. shell powder
charge blew up at an Army anti
aircraft installation.
No injuries were reported im
mediately but more than 3.000 per-
mm a a .trtuatal flAm iki
"neighborhood by midnight.
A fire at the installation was
quickly brought under control and
a Fifth Army headquarters
spokesman said he doubted if it
would spread.
Nevertheless, Chicago police be
gan an evacuation of residents in
a half-mile square area near the
installation.
Capt. Clark Martin, duty offi
cer of the 22nd Anti-Aircraft Group,
said a sentry reported that a light
ning bolt which hit a. revetment
started the fire and explosion.
Periodic explosions of the high
explosive shells rocked the neigh
borhood and pelted the area with
chunks of shell casings.
Brilliant orange flashes of the
exploding shells and the glare of
,h. hlirninir huMnt lichtPd th
the burning building lighted the
sky for miles.
TAFT IN GOOD CONDITION
NEW YORK Lfi Sen. Robert
A. Taft' (R-Ohio) was reported in
"good" condition Sunday at New
York Hospital which he entered
Saturday for checkup on a hip ail
ment that was treated there re
cently. The hospital said he had
spent a restful gght
LOCUSTS IN NEW DELHI
NEW DELHI Or) A foursquare-mile
swarm of locusts in
vaded New Delhi Sunday, black
ing out the city for about three
hours before flying on toward Ut
tar Pradesh State.
Do You Know?
The physically handicapped
need your help. Goodwill- in
dustries needs year discarded
clothing, furniture and house
hold articles! to keep the
handicapped employed.
; Tnlphon 4-2248
For Tuesday pickups ia West
Salem it Seuth of Center St;
Fridays North f Center St
Rain Turns i
Korean Front
Into Quagmire!
By ROBERT GIBSON
SEOUL GB A driving rain
turned the Korean front into a
quagmire Sunday. Ground action
dwindled and Allied soldiers ought
to keep their water-logged bunkers
from caving in. ,
The heaviest fighting was report
ed south of Virginia Hill on the
Eastern Front where two Commu
nist companies about 300 men
assaulted South Korean Seventh
Division! troops before dawn. 1
The Korean defenders killed or
wounded 100 Chinese, the Eighth
Army reported, in beating off the
attack despite a Communist artil
lery barrage of some 4,000 rounds.
Allied troops manning an outpost
on Sniper Ridge in the central sec
tor killed or wounded 87 Chinese,
the Army said. The Reds threw
three light probes against the posi
tion. Other light jabs were turned back
southwest of little Gibraltar on the
Western Front and northwest of
Front.
Nineteen B-26 Invaders unload
ed 38 tons of high-, explosives oa
Red frontline positions.
For the third straight day wea
ther interfered with fighter-bomber
operations.
The Air Force said from sunrise
to S p.m. up to two inches of rain
fell alopg the front. Rain continued
throughout the night.
Mud slowed but did not halt
army supply traffic on the dirt
roads. There were reports of some
bunker cave-ins.
Meantime, Gen. Maxwell D. Tay
lor, Eighth Army commander,
"conservatively" estimated Com
munist casualties during June at
jn nnn t
The enemy used the equivalent
of 125 to 150 battalions in 130 at- j
tacks against Allied positions," he j
said. I
A battalion at full strength has
800 to 1.000 men. The Taylor esti-1
mate indicated that about half the
Chinese soldiers who stormed Al
lied lines were killed or wounded.
Some of the assaults, supported
by the greatest Red bombardments
of the war, gained up to five miles
of ground, however, on the East
Central Front.
Trans-Atlantic
Airliners Give
'Password'
SHANNON AIRPORT. Ireland UH
Transatlantic commercial pilots
must now fly prescribed routes
when crossing America's East
Coast and be ready to give a se
cret password i challenged, airline
sources said Sunday.
The steps were taken to tighten
American safeguards against sud
den air attack. American and for
eign airlines are cooperating in the
defense plan which has been tagged
"Tomcis."
Airline spokesmen said pilots of
an transatlantic pianes leaving j
Shannon Airport for the F"'11 '
.ticiics. aic given ui idiiia
with instructions to fly a secret
zig-zag corridor when entering the
U.S. 1
Two U.S. Air Force officers have
been stationed at the" airport where
they give sealed envelopes to the I
pilots containing the position of the j
corridor and secret password
The instructions which change
daily are mapped by the Defense
Department in Washington and re
layed here through the U.S. Em
bassy in Dublin.
The new defense measures were
designed partly to ease the costly
task of identifying all commercial
planes crossing the radar screen ,
guarding the U.S. coast.
Previously, jet fighters were kept
?,C,k;"L?il?!S "y!22 0Ut
not identified.
2 Burglaries
Investigated
Two burglaries one in a home
and the other in the Salvation
Army Thrift Shop, 237 State St.
were under investigation Sun
day night by city police.
About $31 was taken from a j
residence at 1273 N. 16th St. j
sometime between 5 and 8 p. m. 1
Saturday.
John Dickson, of New York,
who is staying at the residence
while in Salem, told police the
money was taken from his wife's
purse which was on a bedroom
dressing table.
A few cents and key to bank
deposit bag were found missing
from the Salvation Army Thrift
Shop, police said.
A front door window was
broken and a rock found inside.
CHERRIES WANTED
:'' !
BRINING
Royal Anncs, Bings, Lamberts
and Black Republican
KELLEY, FARQUHAR & CO.
1450 Til Read j :
-.. Phone 2-4133 . j l . ' Salm
Man Charged With
Riding Motorcycle
Around j Children
A Salem motorcyclist was ar
rested early Sunday evening af
ter city police found him riding
his cycle ' in the. Bush pasture
playground area Where dozens of
small children were playing.
Melvin Lester BUrright, 38, of
1035 Hoyt St, was charged with
reckless driving and violation of
his operator's license restriction.
He posted $58 bail.
Police said the motorcycle "was
being driven in - between and
around, the playing children and
around trees and bushes in the
1300 and 1400 blocks of South
High Street about 6 p.m.
Burright's operator's license is
restricted to motor scooters,
police said.
ilea rdirope
Restlessness
Under Control
By RICHARD O'REGAN
VIENNA, Austria (JP) Is Rus
sia's East European sateHrte em
pire crumbling and about to fall?
Is this the meaning of the Ber
lin and Czech riots, or reported
martial law in West Poland, or re
ported clashes in Romania?
Western diplomats in Vienna
said Sunday they do not believe
so despite the impression left
in the West by weekend govern
ment shakeups and reported dis
turbances behind the Iron Cur
tain. They believe the Kremlin 'and
its puppet leaders in the satellite
countries have the restlessness of
70 -million East Europeans under
control,
To meet that discontent, the
Communist regimes are reacting
both with force and with con-
cessions. Force has Been used
jn Berlin and Czechoslovakia.
"kindness" has been used in
Hungary and Romania.
And throughout the entire area
a fundamental change of Com
munist tactics in dealing with the
subjugated East European peo
ples appears in the making.
The Western diplomats say the
reports of disturbances are. of
immense significance, but they
cautioned that they "must not be
over-rated."
They said they are merely sig
nals that the Kremlin's past pol
icy of treating East Europeans as
slaves has been wrong, and that
the Kremlin knows it and is
changing it
The diplomats say they believe
the new Communist gestures to
the dissatisfied workers of East
Europe probably can be tied to
East Berlin and Czechoslovak out
breaks. Fear that these disturb
ances would spread probably
speeded them up.
They say developments in East
Europe urobably can be tied to
the Kremlin. They say they
need a period of quiet and peace
to strengthen their position.
Charles Adams
-a
ollCCllITlfaS
At Roseburg
Charles I. Adams, 61, Salem
area resident for the past 48
years, died Friday at Roseburg
Veterans Hospital where he had
been a patient for four years.
For many years Adams was a
berry grower on his 33-acre farm
at Kingwood Heights, West Sa
lem. He first came to Oregon in
1905 with his family, settling on
Orchard Heights Road.
He was born Nov. 27, 1891 in
yakimaf wast,., ,nd was married
to EIla Hillmon April 24, 1918.
gne djed in 1945
Adams ;eteran f World
War I, serving with the 77th Di-
a mem-
ber of
the
storied "Lost Bat-
talion."
He was a charter member of
the Kingwood American Legion
Post
In 1948 Adams moved to Aums
ville and resided with his son,
Robert Adams.
Surviving are two sons, Robert
C. Adams, Aumsville, and Daniel
D. Adams, Oswego; three broth
ers, Robert L. Adams and George
G. Adams, both of Salem, and
Clarence D. Adams, New Albany,
Ind.; two sisters, Mrs. Claude
Moore, Crabtree, and Mrs. C. W.
Grabenhorst, Salem; also two
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. in Clough
Barrick Chapel with the Rev. S.
Raynor Smith officiating. Inter
ment will be at Belcrest Memo
rial Park.
BANK DEPOSITS DROP
SEATTLE W A survey dis
closed Saturday that deposits in
13 Seattle banks and their out-of-town
branches dropped $76,752,
008 in the first half of 1953.
Fire Continues
In Area Near
Los Angeles
LOS ANGELES CP A three
day fire burned on Sunday night
in the rugged San Gabriel Moun
tains despite the efforts of nearly
1,000 fire-fighting experts. More
than 40,000 acres and 5 per cent
of the timber in Los Angeles Na
tional Forest have been burned,!
foresters estimated.
A drop in wind velocity and rise'
in humidity after dark slowed the
spread of the blaze somewhat, but
foresters held little chance of con
trolling it before Wednesday.
Eight dwellings have been de
stroyed. Sunday the flames, being fought
by nearly 1,000 men, broke out
anew at three points Cooper
Canyon, near Buckhorn Camp and
along Santiago Canyon. No dwell
ings were under immediate threat
at the "hot spots," but the break
outs threatened new areas of wa
tershed. The blaze Sunday jumped the
Angeles Crest Highway, main ar
tery linking Los Angeles with
Palmdale and the Antelope Val
ley. The fire, worst in the area In
11 years, has been steadily ex
panding northeast and northwest
as it burns down the eastern
slope of the San Gabriels, aided
by 90-degree weather, low humidi
ty and gusty winds from the des
ert. Slaughter of
Beef Cattle
Thins Herds
WASHINGTON OP The Bureau
of Agricultural Economics report
ed Sunday that a record slaughter
of beef cattle since February s
halting an expansion in production
of this kind of meat animal.
Sharply lower prices for some
classes of beef cattle coupled with
a severe drought in the Southwest
were said to be factors contribut
ing to the heavy slaughter.
The agency said this offered pro
mise that cattle prices will show
more stability in the next few years
than previously seemed likely, pro
vided, of course, consumer incomes
stay high.
Between 37 and 40 per cent more
cattle were slaughtered by commer- j
cial firms in April-June this year
than in the same period last year.
As a consequence, beef con
sumption has been lifted far above
last year and may. for the year as
a whole, exceed the record aver
age of 73 pounds for each con
sumer set in 1909.
The bureau said it is normal for
declines to retail to lag behind de
clines in cattle prices.
Thunderstorm
Damage Heavy
In Iowa Area
By Th' Associated Press
A thunderstorm with winds up
to 100 miles an hour caused
extensive property damage in Wat
erloo. Ia., and nearby Cedar Falls
late Sunday.
In the extreme northwestern part
of the state, hail flattened crops
during that area's worst storm in
years. One man was killed by ligh
ting. Severe thounderstorms also swept
the Pittsburgh district in Western
Pennsylvania. Lightning there, too,
killed a man.
An early morning storm at
Peoria. DI., knocked down half the
tents of the heart of Illinois Fair.
Eight persons were injured. Some
livestock got loose.
Winds, up to 70 miles an hour
were reported during a thunder
storm at Topeka. Kas., Cedar
Rapids, la., suffered property dam
age in a wind storm and a funnel
cloud was "seen near Des Moines.
Iowa City, la., reported exten
sive damage in a violent thunder
storm that struck during a Fourth
of July program Saturday night
It caused some-, panic among hun
dreds of persons who were caught
in city park when the storm hit and
began knocking down tree limbs.
See Norge Time-Line
Automatic Washer At
AL LAUE,
REFRIGERATION I A PPL.
235 State St. Ph. 3-5441
Eastern Orocon Bef bought direct from the ranch and hauld in our jown trucks. Cutting, wrapping, old fashion
ed smoking and curing. We quick-freeze your beef free. Custom killing, i Convenient credit may b arranged. A full
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PAGES!!! HOUSE VtmUBSRSE
FRONT QUARTER
POUND
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u zy
Salem Heal Co.
Washington Mirror
Senate Studies
USDA to Combat Cattle Ills
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Statesman Cerreapopdent '
WASHINGTON The full force of federal protection against new
livestock diseases which currently threaten flocks and herds In
Oregon will swing into action if Congress enacts an Administration
sponsored bill before adjournment ' J f
The Senate on Monday is scheduled to take up the measure,
which adds scrapie and blue tongue and other unspecified livestock
maladies to the list of those which
can aid states in helping prevent.!
These two livestock diseases, plus
leptspirosis ana vesicular exan
thema were the four new animal
diseases which the Oregon state
agriculture department warned
the state's farmers against this
past week.
California Source
California has been the scene
of outbreaks of both blue tongue
and scrapie. All four 'maladies are
incurable.
Presently, USDA can't take any
action until outbreaks reach se
rious proportions which threaten
the nation's livestock industry,
when the secretary is empowered
to declare an emergency. Such a
situation developed in California
over scrapie last October, "result
ing in the slaughter of 900 sheep.
The state and federal government
shared alike in indemnifying far
mers $30,000 for their lost ani
mals. ,
USDA Could Help
Congressional enactment of the
disease bill would permit USDA
to offer its Cooperation to states
at any time in eradication and
controL fi'ig problem is insuffi
cient knowledge needed effective
ly to combat the diseases.
Blue tongue is thought to be
transmitted from infected sheep
to others by a midge or culicoid
es, which does its work only in
the summer months.' Researchers
in South Africa have proved that
these biting-gnats are carriers.
A spokesman for the Bureau of
Animal Industry of the depart
ment said his agency hoped to
try vaccination of sheep to pro
tect them in areas where blue
tongue-infected sheep are believ
ed to be.
Two Methods Used
Quarantine and destruction are
the only methods being used to
combat spread of scrapie. Under
the new bill, the secretary could
indemnify farmers for lost sheep
or cattle killed to block the
spread.
Leptospirosis, likewise, has no
cure as yet It would be handled
under the authorization being
sought in Congress. A separate
program is already underway for
fighting vesicular exanthema.
ws
Imnortant'
2 Profit
Telephone:
2-4139
Spinach, $1.84 per dozen.
0,
HALF OR WHOLE
POUND
1325 So.
to Allow
I t11ll Irsll rlllC
"t-rA flAXJ.JVJ.l. A-Jlta
Passenger
Wields Gun
WAi,LA WALLA, Wash. (P-A
berserk and drunken passenger of
a Greyhound bus enroute from
Lewiston, Idaho to Walla Walla
terrorized 20 passengers of the
bus with a 22 caliber automatic
late Saturday night before he
was finally disarmed and sub
dued by the driver.
Walla Walla police removed
Willie Curtis Smith and charged
him with vagrancy pending fur
ther .investigation.
Passengers told police the man
got on at Lewiston but did not
become troublesome until the vehicle-
was between Pomeroy and
Dayton.
For'several minutes he roamed
up and down the. aisle threaten
ing passengers with the gun.'
Thel driver stopped the bus
near Dayton and took the gun
away from the troublesome rider
after a brief scuffle.
Wala Walla police were noti
fied and were waitiffg at the bus
depot;
PRINTING
(For Quality Work and
Speedy Service
DIAL 3-8853
W ALLY'S PRINTSHOP
Masonic Bldg. State & High
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To "rejuvenate" your tired blood fast, try
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tbat itarta to atroBrthm tired blood witbia
14 boor.
Jutt it tobleaaooao of Gorttol rUli
twice ta iroa ia a poaad of aalvos' Hear,
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Days
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SEMI-ANNUAL IAININOS
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112)1212
H (
2511. St.
Ike Joins in
Prayer for
Peace Victory
THURMONT. Md. OP) Presi
dent Eisenhower attended church
services here Sunday and Joined
prayer for ,Mnew faith, new
strength and new courage that
we may win the battle for peace."
The President spending the
Fourth of July weekend at his
Camp David cabin in the Catoctin
Mountains, motored about six
miles td the Trinity Evangelical
and Refprmed Church. ;
Mrs. Eisenhower and a group of
house guests remained at the cab
in. The President was accom
panied only by Navy Lt Hugh L.
Culbfeath, a member of the
Camp David stafL '
Eisenhower's attendance . was
not announced in advance I but a
small group of churchgoers was
on hand to welcome him at the
doo'i a ' . ;r--i
The President joined with the
rest of the congregation In reci
ting T"Uncle Sam's Prayer."
which was written by Conrad N.
Hilton, president; of the Hilton
Hotels Corporation. . .
"We live in fear of war to
come," theprayer says, and con
cludes with a call for nev4aith,
strength and courage to win the
battle for peace. . j i
The title of the sermon by the
pastor Dr. Edouard H. Taylor,
was f'spiritual independence," in
keeping -with Fourth of July ob
servances, i i -
Percival Jones
POP
heard a man say
today that if yoa want the best
space 'heater in town g U the
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JULY 14
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Flsne 34353