I) Statesman. Satan On. Smw July 19. 1353 Premier Sunday Cross-Word Puzzle ' ' ' lr "f""1"!"" - J VVV . 1IL I" 1 I4'- t 555 5 """" T" t 2 222 VAV. W W" 50 54 51 VyW"- " : WtZ'ZZ bTj I i i m 6 552 555 71 n 75 19 W " 9t M- 5 5 91 ,6 : : . g'0i J 2g 1 Detest 6 Indian prince KV-Sleeplik states IS ii rTflger 19 Greek war god 20 Angry 21 Plant used far 22 Deofcn 23 Gentle men 34 Opening in tfee kin 25 Fortifi cation X Species of pier TT Son of Noah 23 Feminine 31 Burning heat 32 Unaccom panted 34, Eat , sparingly 35 Earthly 37 Heathen 39 Edible seeds 40 Roster 41 Gaelic sea god 42 Child's marble .43 American president 44 Be fitting 46 Sheet of . glass 47 Diagrams 48 Requirements HORIZONTAL 40 Finds the sum S3 Skill in S4JEtecep. tsjdes Cor dis playing articles 55 Beach 56 Croup of boy scouts 57 Traverse &8 Poets 59 Galley 0 Bene ficiary of a win 63 Men 64 Made temperate 5 Stimulate oo Hard growths on skin 7 Yielded S Pro nounces sentence on 60- Cats the outside part , from 70 Over spread 71 Fairy queen 74 Anglo Saxon slave 75 Recrea tion grounds T8 Has courage 77 Arrived 90 Devil $1 Mark of omission 83 Noah's vessel 8& Exclama tion of despair 86 Sub stance of strong musky odor 87 PUm formed on copper 88 Edible seeds 90 Delicate 91 Brick layer 2 Foreigner 93 Models $5 Reduce to pulpy state 96 Past 99 Part of a church 100 Be sparing rOt Putin vigorous action. r03 Cease 104 News paper paragraph 105 English coins 106 Fixed . relation 107 In this place 10S Pro montory 109 Flower 110 Guide 111 Paradise 78 Rejects Answer to above cross word puzzle on Page 1 1 ; VERTICAL 1 Chop ; 39 Harsh 71 Se- into i cries soned bits : Gives 73 Prayer ' 2 Melody tern- ending 3 Bolster. porarQy 73 Greek oms ' j 43 Trans- letter woman parent 76V-Draw 4 Worm sub- out 5 Matures stance 7 Inventors i fiAs- 44 Orche. 77 Roman ; cended tras- state. T-Sounds 45 Defaced - man harshly 47 Ordinary 79 Ache 8 De- language 80 Face i voured 48 Goods of a 8-Merceo- 50 Per- watch j aries former 81 Money j ! JO Jeweler's 51 Cupola 82 Crystal. I weights 53 Has- line 11 Hebrew tened amino weights 54 Allow- acid 12 Method ' ances 83 Tell 13 Scare- (or, 84 Cutting mongers waste utensil j 14 Japa- 55 Condi- 86-Bow1- nese meats shaped : ; coin 5 Italian depression 15 Give a river 87-MSpwW prize 57 Offenses tual 14 Willful 58 Un- over, de- covers seer aCroyer Por- 89--Abounds IT Chant tends 90 Snclo- 19 More 60 Conceal sure xpn 61 Son W Fem arve of nine 28 art Seth name of a 62 Image 94 Force : skeleton 63 Tar- 95 Measure 30 Canvas gets out shelter 64 Number 97 Blood I 31 Poker 6 Sounds 98 Free I stake an to be 33 Tardy alarm entered i 34 College 67 French 100 Mineral officials artist spring j 3 Utilizes 69 Hangers 102 Indian i 37 Father on memorial 38 Culture 70 Desert post medium animal 103 Pronoun First Section The African Gold Coast has large deposits of bauxite (alumi num ore.) friendk PI service rf&' mates VSr" the S IJ?r toons are available many places at similar rates and terms The way me loan a arranged sokes the BIG difference.. You'll find we specialize in fast, pleasan Viendly service ... understanding end consideration ... extra things that cost you no more and ssake vow glad you stopped in. $25 to $1500 IN 1 TRIP Call first, say "tow wen" and "when, cMiplete Ht leaa i one trip oa ; suiaiiie iir. at ok riiiuiu Boom 200317 Court St . Phone 4-339C - t J. D. Walker, Mgr. Madras Canal Breaks Again MADRAS, Ore. 11 Another break put the main canal of the North Unit Irrigation Project out of commission again Friday. It was only two days since a previ ous break had been repaired. Once again workmen blamed a natural spring for weakening the canal wall. Drains now are being installed to carry water away from the spring. A concrete foun dation over the spring will be constructed next. The break left 37,000 acres with out irrigation water for the time being. The Smithsonian Institute oper ates a tropical biological labora tory on Barro Colorado Island, Canal Zone. Albany Soldiers On Troop Transport SEATTLE W More Oregon Army veterans from Korea are scheduled to arrive here Tuesday aboard the transport Gen. C.I C. Ballou. Included are: Cpl Harry E. Ca son Jr., 805 Ellsworth St., Albany; Sfc Jay N. Dryden, route 1, Albany. DON'T WORRY HAVE DEPENDABLE, INSUKANCi MOTfCriOW Guy Jonas, Ins. 2035 Fairgrounds Rd. Phone 3-9431 Prevent Eye Injury! In the shop, in sports, or while driving, wear the new Unbreakable Glasses thot won't shat ter . . won't break. Ready In ,1 day et Semfer Optical. - ' Eiibornl Credit NO EXTRA Charge Pmf eWy fm com arfortf My me Meats!?. Wssr year ClasM WftSe Pmyim (50) m rv a OauyV 3-3311 V-awser "." . ' I i:ar77 - nrnri OKH I SO AM ur.a,M 0FEICES Wsttn-slss pit. STATE 8 CQMMEROAt SslssyOm. 3 0 msm $b StelDon7 (SSDuinKDir Editor Note: Eddy Gilmore, Associated Press correspond ent in Russia for 11 year is on his way home and In this story (which begins en page ene) he tells for the first time, without j censorship, jthe story ef Russia as he saw it STOCKHOLM (P) After Stalin died, you could almost feel the Russian people relax. $ , Georgi Malenkov realized this and moved to meet it with force. Lavrenty P. Beria, the head of the secret police, stood in Malenkov way. He is gone., Premier Georgi Malenkov ordered a price reduction. It was a good one too, not phony like so s WCuop many of the others. Some reduc tions were as much as 50 per cent and many item of consumer good were, included. Prices are still up. Way up. But they're better and life is easier for the Russian people. Then the Malenkov government ordered the amnesty and many people were freed. But not political prisoners. Kinder to the West The Communist officials started to treat Western diplomats and the handful of American correspond ents in Moscow with courtesy and in some cases, consideration. There were other signs, like these: The signal went up to change the tactics in Korea ... the Soviets took steps to regularize relations with Yugoslavia ... the sharp and at times ludicrous name-calling of the West slackened The Press De partment invited correspondentsto take a. trip through the Kremlin. Then they organized a trip to the Volga-Don Canal ... once told to get out of the buildings they'd oc cupied for years, the British and American embassies were inform ed they could stay if they liked. The British did. The Americans went into a new building ... six Russian wives of Americans were told they could leave the country with their husbands and children ... an American woman who had two children by a Russian, and later divorced him, was allowed to take the children to the states ... George Bundock, who'd been a vir tual prisoner in the British embas sy refusing to surrender him self for a jail sentence he felt was unjustly imposed was allowed to leave ... the harsh travel re strictions were somewhat relaxed ... the Malenkov government pro mised to alter the criminal code. To make things easier ... they in timated to the people that the ter ror that came in the night (the security police) wouldn't be com ing in the night any more, except under certain conditions 'Real Change of Heart' Some persons in the West, and the East, said everything was changing in Russia. That there was a real change of heart. The United States government said it was a change in tactics only. To beware. To be careful. The Brit ish and the French and some of the others longed to have a meet ing and to talk to the Russians. I met a highly placed Russian at a party just before I left Mos cow June 30. "You people think a revolution is going on here," he said. "It isn't. We are 'normalizing a lot of things though." And they are. Against this comes a lot of the old, tiresome nonsense. Beria has been an agent of imperialist pow ers ... agents of Western imperial ism started the East Berlin demon strations ... Eastern Germany wants no part of 15 million dol lars worth of food offered by the United States. Same old stuff. Yet, when you look at it closely, the men now in power could hard ly, under the circumstances, do anything else. They have to speak or they certainly are convinced they do to the millions of people in the satellite nations. To the poor and ignorant in China and India and the restless East and Africa. To the people in South America. To the British Commonwealth, which they'd like very much to separate from the United States. Army and Political PoUce And there are the Army and the political police at home. Beria has been removed and Ser gei Kruglov, who was a high of ficial in the police when Beria was riding high, is the high chieftan for the present, and you might underline that of the security police. What about the Army? We know it's big and powerful. That it has good and fast airplanes. That its tanks are among the best in the world. That it has manpower to spend and will spend it as we of the West would never spend it. It has, probably, quite a few atomic bombs. It must have atomic weapons. While it doesn't bother with battleships, the Navy has qui- Health in a Bottle . . Your doctor's prescription represents his sound judg ment as to how best to safe guard or Improve your health. With meticulous care and precision; we fill his prescrip tion from adequate stocks of fresh, high: quality drugs. SCHAEFER'S DRUG STORE 1899 1953 Open Daily 7:30 A-M.-8 PJM. Sunday. 9 A-M.-4 PJK. 135 N. Commercial ' etly been building a tremendous submarine fleet. The Army's intelligence system must be good. What about its leaders? Marshal Nikolai Bulganin not a fighting marshal, but a political one, incidentally is right up there on the power dais with Mal enkov. Zhukov Returns for Duty Marshal Georgi Zhukov, a con siderable fighting man, has been brought back from the wilds and is in Moscow as a deputy minister of defense. Marshal Ivan Koniev is very much about So is Marshal Leonid Govorov. Marshal 'Semy on Budyen ay of the long mustaches. And Marshal Klementi Voroshilov is president" of the Soviet Union. Marshal Vasilevsky is up at the top. Timoshenko is still around. So are Marshal Vasily Sokolovsky and Ar my General Shtemenko. - Somebody kicked a few of the marshals in the pants at the Com munist Party congress back last October. Timoshenko and Budyen ny, for instance, were demoted from full members of the Central Committee to the status of candi date member. Marshal Govorov's name was even left off the first list and a few days after its publication, Pravda hurried into print with an explanation that through an error his name had been omitted. Oh yeah? Doctors Plot to Kill Aides After the party congress several high military men were given distinction, dubious through it may have been. Those terrible doctor plotters were trying to cut short the lives and put out of action: Koniev, Govorov.Vassilevsky, Sht emenko, Admiral Levchenko "and others," if I remember correctly. That story came out when Stalin was still alive and when Beria was very much in the running. What was it all about? Frank ly, I've never cottoned on to that one and it may take sometime be fore we know the real reason why these military men were singled out by whoever dreamed up the doctors plot. The Italian ambassador in Mos cow, the astute Baron Mario Di Stefano, used to put his hand on my shoulder, shake his wise head and say: "Eddy, ; everything goes back to the doctors. The doctors. The doctors. It was a Borgia plot with a Con an Doyle twist and an O. Henry ending. Or has it ended? New Russia or Retouched? Is there a new look in Russia, or is this Stalinism1 with Malenkov sauce? I saw enough to make me feel, with some reservations, that a lot of Stalinism is dead. I can't get it out of my head that unless Malenkov plays his cards right, down to the deuces, someone from the Army, or V. M. Molotov, or Nikolai Bulganin, or Nikita Khrushchev or some dark horse may come rushing into the act. Well, I'm glad I'm out out of Russia with my wife and my two children after 11 years. And I'm also glad that I'm iot in the olitical business in Mos cow. That has always been one of the world's most dangerous games. It would be even more hazardous now. It's hard to tell which way the tiger jumps, and the tiger has long claws. Yet there are things about that country, some of them strikingly Cripps, Negro Law Student, Wed By SEYMOUR TOPPING ' LONDON LB Enid Margaret Cripps, fair-haired youngest daugh ter of the late Sir. Stafford Cripps, was married Saturday to a Negro law student from the Gold Coast, Joseph i Applah. before primly dressed Britons and robed Ashanti tribesmen at fashionable St. John's Churchws i - I . "The i whole world you and you go out from this church to live sew life together in Christ a life which knows no barriers," the couple was told by the Rev. N.'A. Perry-Gore. The two plan to settle down in the Gold Coast, a British colony on tfiel West Coast of Africa. marvelous things, that I shall nev er forget, ' The Russian people come first. Ruthless j yet tender. Hard as hell on one another, yet sweetly gentle to children. An inner fire that can simmer and blaze and express it self so adequately in art, in the theater! principally the great Mos cow Art Theater, in music, in danc ing. Hcpeless with machinery 1 and keeping ! appointments and living an orderly life. 'Wild running im aginations and a lush language with enchanting ways of saying things. fEsoteric, with an enormous capacity for sadness and suffering, for laughter and happiness. A truly great people who've had the stuff ings kicked out of them by their rulers for centuries, who've been invade by everything from the Goldenf Horde to Adolf Hitler. Som4 day some one of them may lead them out of the wilderness of their past and present. The talent that i$ theirs in abundance may touch the edges of the world and be hoqehed by the world. I hope I'm around for that ... The bride is a tall, buxom womai of 32 who is known as Peggy. TM bridegroom, an Inch or two short' er, is .the bespectacled : son of a tribal leader and personal repre sentative in London of the Gold Coast's' Prime iMinister. Appiah wore the brilliant crim son, green and yellow striped cere monial! dress of the Ashanti tribe. is watching 4 The bride, who was riven away oy ner brother, John Cripps, wore a gowh of embroidered silk bro cade with ankle-length skirt and long, tight sleeves. ji Lady Cripps, widow of the La borite leader who was a postwar chancellor of the exchequer, and uer crfigusn inenas siooa in me church! beside Gold Coast Africans in their brilliant native robes and sang the hymn: "There is no east or west, or north or south, but one great fel lowship: of love throughout the whole wide world." ! i While handkerchiefs fluttered and Appiah' fellow tribesmen held aloft lucky charms, the newlyweds drove off in a car flying the Union Jack and the Gold Coast flag. They will honeymoon in Paris. i-tHinr- mr c.sMtt- S-'.T -yjf-.J.-..-. v... r Our Wedge . . . Continued Conscientious, Dignified Service At A Price Anyone Can Afford v n dwell Edwards Phone 3-672 FUNERAL HOME 545 N. Capitol Across from Sears i Leston W. Howell j Hilda E. Howell ! Harry (Al) Vogt Charles C EdwardV Francos M. Edward j Donald Waggoner : W ' : : . i - J 0 The Special 'SUNLK&HT' Flavor of Now More Perfectly Preserved in Special ill 1t Ml Mill - . r II Y r H I A 1 I Y V, V I in I Another First By This is the story of a new service, designed to protect the health of yourself and your farhily, and to bring you our special homogenized, Vitamin D Milk in more perfect condition tnan ever betore. For many years now, science has known that exposure to light has certain undesirable keeping qualities and vitamin content of milk. After considerable research. Prof. D. V. State University says this: . " i ffects upon the isephson of Ohio The problem of the "sunlight" flavor is important because it can be produced by short periods of exposure to sunlight and even in the shade. We have produced this flavor in milk during a snow storm aad on very cloudy days . . . The rays of light responsible for the production of this flavor and the rays responsible for riboflavin destruction are unlikely to pass through amber glass. Ever on the outlook for new services and developments thatfwill benefit our customers, Curly's Dairy recent ly learned of a new amber-type bottle, specially designed tofilter out these harmful light rayj. To prove to ourselves the effectiveness of this new bottle, we took two quarts of our homogenized!; milk, identical in every way. One was in the regular clear glass bottle and the other was in the special amber bottle. We placed both the bottles in the daylight tor one pour ana men put mem away m our reTngeraior for several days. At the end of that time, several, persons were asked to taste-test samples of both bottles.. j lp every j case, without knowing which milk had been in the protective bottle, all agreed that the unprotected milk had de veloped a definite, strong taste, while the protected milk was Estill delicious and sweet. We -repeated the ex periment at various times and under varying weather conditions, out the results remaineq. constant. , 1 t In keeping with our policy to give our customers every poss ble protection and benefit, Curly's Dairy once again establish! its leadership by being the first dairy In Salem to deliver iits special, homogenized, Vitamin D Milk in these new, hteallhr protecting, amber bottles, at no extra cost to you. - j ' i i- :.' . North Fairgrounds Rd. at Hood , j I- F 0- Telephone ?:8783