The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 29, 1953, Page 16, Image 16

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PJewsmento
FlashNames
Of Freed PWs
By STAN CARTER
8a (Sec 2 Statesman Satan: re.. Wed July 23, IS S3
Oregon Polishers View Statesman Plant
TOKYO US The first Ameri
1
can and United Nations prisoners
may be returned to Allied hands
on Aug. 5.
And within minute after the first
prisoners are jxchanged at Pan-1
munjom, correspondents will flash
their names to the newspapers and I
radio stations in their home towns.
In all, the Reds say they hold
3.313 Americans and 1,264 prisoners
from other Allied nations, except
ing South Korea.
As the trickle of returning pris
T'1
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V- ' iff i
W? -:- f -ID:""
7
m
m
oners grows larger it may take an
hour or more to get their names
out on the shaky communications
facilities available to the press in
Korea.
No date has been set for the be-"
LIUUUL-l J EJLS'LZlEJ. VI UJ. !
Northwest Oregon newsmen were given a tour of the new Statesman plant as part of a day-long dis
cussion on office management at the paper's offices Saturday. Inspecting the plant's composing room
are Miss Louise McGilvra, Forest Grove News-Times, George Holland, Lincoln County Leader; Max
Schafer, Seaside Signal; Lawrence Spraker, Stayton Mail; Elmer R- Price, Lincoln County Leader;
Mrs. Spraker and Charles A. Sprague, Oregon SUtesman, host publisher. (Statesman photo.)
Dr. Kleinsorge
Heads Oregon
College Board
PORTLAND W) The State
Board of Higher Education an
nounced Tuesday it will need more
time before it is ready to interview
applicants for the job of president
of the University of Oregon.
Credentials of some 40 applicants
must be studied first, .said Chan
cellor Charles D. Byrne. The job
will not become vacant until Oct.
1, when President Harry K. New
burn becomes head of a Ford
Foundation organization to study
educational possibilities in radio
and television. '
I Dr. R. E. Kleinsorge, Silverton
physician, was elected board presi
dent, succeeding Edgar W. Smith,
Portland. Named vice president
was Henry F. Cabell, Portland.
G. F. (Ted) Chambers, Salem,
became a member of the executive
committee.
The board appointed an advisory
committee to consider the course
changes needed to fit the colleges
of education for training of high
schoolteachers and the University
of Oregon and Oregon State College
or the training of grade school
teachers.
The board also authorized ap
praisal of a block of homes near
Portland State College. The prop
erty is being considered for pos
sible expansion of the school.
Ornithologists now believe that
the short-tailed albatross of the
Pacific Ocean may have followed
the dodo, the great auk and the
Labrador duck into extinction.
1 -
He spends
mi
Ashland to Vote
On Pool Purchase
ASHLAND UP) A special election
will be held here Aug. 8 to decide
whether the city will buy the Twin
Plunges swimming pool for $55,000.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Gragg, pool
owners, circulated petitions for the
vote, and got a court order that
the election be held. The City
Council Monday night set the date.
Crews at Atom
Plant Ordered
Back to Work
RICHLAND UFt Kaiser Engi
neers, which holds a construction
contract at the Hanford Atomic
Works, ordered all craftsmen back
to work Wednesday, indicating a
strike by 90 millwrights may have
been settled.
The jurisdictional dispute a week
ago temporarily idled more than
5,500 workers. All but a few re
turned to the job, however, when
the local -AFL-Central Labor Coun
cil said the walkout was a "wild
cat strike.
Unable to return because they
worked alongside the millwrights
were 52 machinists. Their business
agent, Fred Keezer, said the 52
would report for, work Wednesday
m'orninj as ordered by the em
ployers. , The millwrights, however, said
they had no information concern
ing a settlement of the strike.
Their business agent, L. R. King,
had not returned from Oakland,
Calif., where he had gone to at
tend a union meeting. . ;
If yo Mfey apenmng money you'd like of the Golden Empire, spending many mil
tho job of General Purchasing Agent for ; t doUars with local people and W
Southern Pacific mdustry Manyof theareoutfits thatS.P.
over half a million dollars every
working day.
Our rtviNi are large, but it takes a lot of
money to run a railroad. A great deal goes
right out again for goods, materials and
supplies to keep the nail road running, our j
passengers happy and your freight moving ,
smoothly.
Soma of rho things we spend the money for
are either staggering or peculiar or both. .
More thap a million and a half new cross
ties every year . . . 2,000 pounds of assorted
rubber bands . . . nearly 16 million barrels ;
of oil . . . two million gallons of creosote . . .
cores of new diesel locomotives ... thou- I
sands of freight cars. These are just a few.
And a lot of the money goes for things you 1
wouldn't ordinarily think of in connection
with a railroad, like two thousand dollars
worth of parsley. Moreover, under S.P.'s
vast modernization program, we bought
several hundred thousand dollars worth of
electronic switching and communication
equipment last year. i
We also bovght more than 90,000 ions of
new rail, angle ban and tie platesor about
1300 50-ton carloads.
Southern Pacific buys tremendous quantities
of th4 thinn it needs within the eight states
STIIIt IFCtHv
, Southern Pacific Company, D. J.
Two Brothers
Convicted of
Rape Charges
COOS BAY tfl Two brothers
were convicted of rape charges
here Tuesday and sentenced to five
years in prison.
Lester Lee Miller, 24, also was
sentenced to five years for armed
r assault. He was convicted of shoot
ing a 16-year-old girl who escaped
from them last week at a beach
near here. The shot wounded her
in the foot.
A 13-year-old girl told police she
was not able to escape, and that
the brothers raped her.
The younger brother, Leroy
Arthur Miller, 18, was sentenced
to five years on the rape charge
and five years on a larceny
charge. The sentences are concur
rent. The sentences for the elder
brother are consecutive.
Arrested with them was Bobby
Dean Griggs, 22, who was sen
tenced to five years on each of
two larceny charges. The sen
tences are consecutive.
A fourth man who was arrested
later, Ernest Guy McDowell, 22,
was sentenced to five years on two
larceny charges. The sentences
i v i !v T ,
of helping Griggs in theft of
power saw.
All the men are from the Coos
Bay area.
Circuit Judge Dal M. King im
posed the sentences.
The first regular diesel-pow-ered
passenger service on U. S.
railroads was started in 1934,
although diesel switch engines
were used regularly as early as
1925.
r-d-
anraciea 10 uw wmwry m uw ursi
thus mfri"g it possible for S.P. and
body else to place more business in the West.
This illustrates the rapid industrial growth
of our Golden Empire.
Our purchasing offices at Portland, San
Francisco, Los Angeles, El Paso, Houston
and New Orleans bay from several thousand
JV f 4 I - V- auma I
tSus Ar) 1 AtiiOMA I
V. vl 1 TIXAS D
local concerns and individuals. AH told, our
purchases totaled over 140 million dollar
last year-an important factor in the econ
omy of the area we serve.
People may that money talk. Well, this is
one of our ways of saying, "It's a pleasure to
do businett with youl"
tSTtll PlllttSt
BosselL President, San Frandsc
dicing of the prisoner exchange.
But the Allies already have be
gun preparations for moving north
the Chinese and North Korean pris
oners.
Within S Days
AP Correspondent Robert Tuck-
man reported from Seoul that U.N.
officers hope to begin the exchange
within five days if the Commu
nists can bring their prisoners south
in that time.
Officers at Gen. Mark Clark's
U.N. Command headquarters in
Tokyo have not yet announced how
next of kin will be notified of the
return of their sons and husbands
They say they cannot disclose this
until plans for Big Switch" the l
prisoner exchange are completed, i
But it was learned from source
close to the headquarters that of
ficers of the U.N. Military Armis
tice Commission, who will handle I
the returning prisoners at Panmun
jom, have been ordered to give the
names of the first prisoners and
others who are particularly news
worthy to correspondents to be sent
directly around the world.
Official List
Later, when the repatriates i
arrive at Freedom ViUage in Mun-
san, an official list of their names
and addresses will be given to new
s-men as soon as (he adjutant gen-
erals casualty section confirms
them.
The reason for giving the names
immediately to the press is that
General Clark feels their families
will learn faster that way than 1
through normal Army channels of
the return of sons and husbands, the
source said.
This is the same policy that was
followed in the exchange of sick
and wounded prisoners "Operation
Little Switch" last April.
CRIME BRINGS CUSTOMERS
SPRING VALLEY, I1L iff) -Andrew
Taliani already had cus
tomers when he went, to open his j
avorn fin rty rtrry ino TTt aicvm
le" were unaware that a burglar
had left the door open after
making off with $75 and a case ,
of whiskey.
To Insure Your
HOME
With
HUGGINS
Ph. 3-9119
piste.
every
YV
X5
1 ! I I I I I I I I All M:llw f i
nj. rn i i I 7 r
I . l J l) J j 1 Advertised Brands!
I , n y-. "V n n n I11' I .""""l Summer , and regular f
fni (rx fr SH YH weights-ixe 35 1 46, . -
r 1 x w"Mrus-
I . GROUP I n y GROUP II J
i " H ...
' f 'f A I I f. Illl Ifll. I I I I I S
t 1 v - J . I I ' " I
1 ii GROUP IV ,
I UKUUP M t 1 s. . I
11 II j rormeriy priced i
1 formerly priced $82.50 ' I I
f , $65.00 d r i s n r J
t " i i v n ri Mil ill
IporS Coafis
IF. S. lle&s ioosiers
nn
OT3 wmm
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
mum sr-
Open Monday
and Friday
Nights
N r '
ll C J VV X horts, regulars, longs, S J
1 M S 1 11 Wool, Nylo Rayon,
U V, Z, XZJ ZJ U U TweedTcaV0" !
"tierly priced I ESI Si? '
$37.50 j - . I
. ' ' I
Broken lots of regular
35-44. Formerly priced
263 pair, values to $10.00
- SLACKS, 143 Pair - Values to 12.95 Now 8.95 2 Pair 16.44
103
suns
Mallory & Knox.
$10.00. SAVE
Broken lots
sizes
Special rack. Fancy deninu loafer; . corduroy.
Formerly priced $5.00 to
Entire stock of Fancy T-Shirts
Sizes S-M-L NOW
kK 1 C3 M 1 W II u
' Lois o! Free Parking
Save Now!!
and light weight sport coats.
$29.50 - $49.50. Save .
$6.85, 2
PATH I
5 colors sizes 6 to 13. Broken
formerly priced $5.95, now
Broken lota; short sleeved and polo shirts
Entire stock formerly priced $4.00 to
- brief style only (boxer style not
28-40, were $2.95 to $5.09
$15.00
- values to
$1.00,
T .
1
2
price
- $12.44
sizes
i
$3.88
1
V" . OFT
2
JL
2
included)
OFT
m
. w OFF
2 -$L75
484 North
Capitol
In the Capitol
Shopping Center
Sizes
.
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