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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 4, 1954)
March of Dimes Containers on Displdy Statesman, Salem, Oregon, fMondcry, January. 4. I i. ! V- . aw n hi A J j WINDOWS BROKEN f Three widows in tiie McDonald Candy Co. warehouse, 13th and Howard Streets, were mushed by rocks early Sunday ibaorning, city police reported. Apparently no attempt had been made to enter the building, police added. BOYS REPORT THEFT I : Three Salem students reported to police Saturday njght that they had observed a man remove one or j more bricks tr,om the con struction area around the South Salem High Schoolf building. FRACTURES WRIST . MrsJ Delia G. Patton, 492 S. High St, was admitted to Salem General HospiUl ;Sunday after the ustained a fracture or the left wrist when she, fell t 532 N. Winter SL She was reported in - satisfactory condition, j TOWNSEND MEET J Central Townsead Club 6 will meet at 2 pm. Monday at 259 Court SL lor a business and social session. j 1 TEACHERS TO MEETj i Retired Teachers Organization ef the Salem area will jneet Wed nesday at 1:30 p.m. in; the Fire place Room of the City Library. All retired teachers invited to attend. . j SET COUNCIL SESSION : I Two meetings are on schedule ! at home this week lor The Che- meketans of Salem. J They will meet Monday nigM a T.3U ior council meeting and Friday night at 8 lor a picture night Both sessions are scheduled for the Chemeke-Den. j YOUTH BOARD SLATED . I Salem YMCA Youth Board will hold their annual dinner meet ing and election of officers Satur day at the YMCA beginning at p.m. J BEEF ROAST TAKEN - Frank M. Cook, 564 University St.; reported to city, police thst someone had broken into the back porch of his home Saturday morning and had taken a beef roast from a refrigerator. Entry was made by prying the screen loose from the door frame, police said. I VANDALS RAID SWIMMING POOL , Vandals broke into (the girls' locker room at the Olinger Swim ming pool, Ed Costello, caretak er, reported to city police Satur day,; and scattered baskets and clothing about the room. Police found three windows broken and ink spattered on walls. Entry was made during the past 'four days, Costello said. ATTEMPTED BURGLARY ! An apparent attempted burg lary : was investigated by police Saturday at the McDowell Meat Market, . 1190 S. 12 St Glass in the;1 rear door had been broken and a bent screwdriver and lead pencil were found under the door. Nothing was reported mis sing, police said. y Lost: Man's Elgin "watsh. En graved oft back Allen G. Wright Reward. Phone 3-7688. BURGLARY REPORTED Mrs. . Edith Spence, house mother in the boys' dormitory at the School for the Blind, South Church and Mission Streets, re ported to city police Saturday night that her room had been burglarized sometime Friday or Saturday. Reported missing were five dresses, two coats and other clothing. Her quarters were also burglarized on New Year s eve, police records indicate, j j LIBRARY MEET SET j ; The Library Development Com mittee of the Oregon Library As sociation has planned a meeting for Salem, Jan. 8, at 9 a.m. at the conference room of the Oregon State Library building. Mrs. Mar tha E. Hansen of Arleta Branch Library, Portland, is chairman of the committee. ti fj'b i -- : - lo Korea JJJV 3s r- - v ft n crr Release of Receiving one of the first March of Dimes collection containers for display near cash registers through out the county is Mrs. George Nopp (left). Shown delivering the containers which feature a test I tube instead of the familiar iron lung are Mrs. T. J. Brabec, president of American Legion Aux iliary Post No. 9, and Carroll Robinson, president of Post No. 136 Auxiliary (right). Delivery of I the container began Saturday and wil continue Monday. (Statesman Photo) j Salem I Obituaries Timber Access Roads Issue I - : 'f In State to Face '54 Congress 4 Top British Uetectivesyiut Scotland Yard ALLEN I William G. ABen. ate ridmt of 01 K. C.pitol St.. at local hosp tl Jan 1. Survived by wife. Mr. Ui M. Allen. Salem: son. Wayne A en, ?- v u?ih Kenneth Allen. C:l;; 'nr.. Harold AUen. San Francisco. Calif., auter. Mrs. Idn Me"SfTBaltiinore. Wd.: two atep Jaute'r.. Mr. Helen HuxeL Seattle, wh Ana tar. x. nv-r T.comY Waah.; .tep-r.nddahter. ittndchildren. Services wiU be held Viriil T. Golden Chapel with Dr. ' Paul N. Poling officiating. Interment ; at Belcrest Memorial Park. j BYERS I I i Kenneth Allen Byert. ct ian 1 Late resident ol 1895 M.di on St.' Survived fey parents. Mjr. : and Mrs. Kenneths Byers. Salern. Private services Monday. Ja- 4 :30 p.m. in the W. T. Ritd on Chapel with the Rev. Erftest P. Goulder officiating. j I CARROLL !' . : 1 I Van W. Carroll, in this city Jan. 1. !. .irf.nt nf 4S9S Battle Creek Rd.. iSalem. Survived b wife Mrs. Cora ;E Carroll. Salem; I daughters. Mary it nnvfr. Colo.. Mrs. Alice tt""" 'cU VnHiMri. Jean Welli !lrnc" ,nJWerden. Donald and Van W. Carroll Jr.. all of Salem; T n. rarmll Denver. Coto.. and Lawrence Carroll. Kansas City. Kan.; sisters, wiua tarruu. i:.t:., Colo and Mrs. 5 Ruth Hartmtn, rnr. Services Tuesday. Jan, r.t a 'm. in the W. T. Rigdon Chapel. j FANNING I Mrs. Dora L. Fanning, late resi dent of 384 N. 13th St at local hospiUl Jan .2. Survived by daugh ters. Mrs. Alma A Goss nd MlM Edith M. Fanning, both of Salem; son. Warren A.i Fanning. Salem; kister, Mrs. Agnes Schwekendiek. Richmond Hill. Long Island, N.;Y.j and two grandchildren, Bert nd Larry Fanning, both of Salem; also several nieces and nephews. Services Wednesday. Jan. ? at 10:30 a.rrt in the Clough-Barrick Chapel with the Rev. Louis E. White officiating. Con cluding services at Mt. Crest Abbey Mausoleum. By A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Correspondent (Second in series on critical issues in the new Congress affecting Oregon.) I WASHINGTON The issue facing the 1954 session of Congress which is most vital to Oregon's No. 1 industry, lumbering, stems from the inadequacy of timber access roads into federal forests. ! The Eisenhower administration has yet to take a stand on wheth er lit thinks the federal government should build access roads or leave it up to private loggers who buy the timber. Consequently cided which way to move on the India Commies 5 tSaid Planning Guerrilla Units (Story on page one.) MUNSAN (JB The U N. Com mand Monday blamed the Commu nists for the collapse of prisoner i explanations, and insisted again that ail anti-Communist prisoners be freed at midnight, Jan. 22. ( Gen. John E. Hull, V. N. com mander, wrote a formal letter to Gen. K. S. Thimayya, Indian chairman of the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission, flatly rejecting a NNRC majority report charging the U. N. C. had tried to control anti-Communist prisoners by "agents provacteur.' Hull said the report was slanted and one-sided, It was signed by India and Communist Czechoslo vakia and Poland. Sweden and Switzerland filed a minority rejJort which Hull called "much more ob factual and indicative of the op erations of the NNRC. 1 j Commies Blamed : f ! The U. N. C. statement blamed the explanation collapse on "the severe disappointment of the rep resentatives of the Korean peoples army and the Chinese peoples' vol unteers at their inability to secure more than a nominal per centage of returnees from groups receiving explanations. 1 j Hull's letter declared, "the Unit ed Nations Command categorically denies any implication that we have attempted, in any way, to exercise control to the slightest PWsMjan. 22 degree over prisoners in the South (anti-Communist) Camp by the in troduction of agents provocateur, or that we have attempted to rain tain any type of covert intelligence network." To Become Civilians f And the U. N. C. commander made it clear that at the first minute of Jan. 23, prisoners! held by the NNRC become civilians un der terms of the armistice! and may go where they choose.f "For those who wish to be as sisted by the United Nations jCom- By ROBERT S. F. JONES LONDON W) Has something gone- wrong with Scotland Yard? Britons were asking themselves that question Sunday at the news that four of the country's top detec tives have in the past fornight resigned from "The Yard" -f in theory, headquarters of London's police force, but in practice nerve center for crime detection through out Britain. I The four who have left are Com mandeV Hugh Young, hatchet faced boss of the yard's Criminal Investigation Department known as the C. I. D.; Chief Superin tendent Arthur Thorp, bead of the yard's anti-fraud squad; finger print expert George Dunn; ( and Superintendent Jack Black, second in command of the "big five" the quintet of sleuths who are called out to lead the nation's big murder hunts. Disagreement Hinted Britons, who venerate Scotland Yard as one of the country's; best run institutions, are uneasy, at newspaper suggestions that the resignations may be due to dis agreement among C. I. D, offi cers with new regulations brought in by Commissioner Sir John Nott Bower, recently appointed boss of the yard. ! And Nott-Bower, himself jineasy at allegations of unrest among his police has 'commented that a least one resignation was due to ill-; health, and has asked newspapers; to soft-pedal the story on the new approach' to this problem un folded last spring by Rep. Harris Ellsworth (R-Ore.), who is re garded as the most authoritative lawmaker on the problem of the lumber industry . Ellsworth's plan is designed to avoid the main obstacle to access road building the recent cut backs in necessary appropria tions. It would have roads finan ced through direct loans from the Treasury to the government's for estry agencies, the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Man agement, rather than by means of funds appropriated by Con gress each year. Would Erase Danger j Through this plan, money would be available yearly 1 as needed for new timber roads within certain generous limits, Ellsworth explains. It would erase f Cpl. Batchelor Reunited With anese Wife it may cause public: il'DGK ! j Dean C. Judge at a local hospital Jan. 1. Late resident of 499 S. College St.. Monmouth. Ore. Survived by wife. Mrs Edith Judge. Monmouth: daughter.1 Mrs.? Kenneth i Wolfe. Salem; sons. Harold Judge. ; Salem: grandchildren. Tamara Lee Judge, Craig Judge and Robert Wolfe, all of Salem. Services will be held Tues day, Jan. S at 2 p. m. in the yirgil T. Golden Chapel with thePev. Ernest P. Goulder officiating. Inter ment at Belcrest Memorial Park. UNIE j , . I " Rosa BeUe Lemke. late resident of S95 N. 14th St, -in this city Dec 31. Survived by husband. Herman C. Lemke of Salem: children. Mrs. Lil lian Winship Kinnear of Longview. u..h .nil Jnhn H WinshiD. Carl H. ; Lemke and Mr. Minnabell AhaM. all of Salem: three granddaughters and one great-grandchild, all of Salem; .rr.thr William A. Diehl of Tacoma. Wasn.: "sisters,! Mrs. Minnie Hughes or Hermosa Beach. Calif, Mrs. Mar garet Fisher and Mrs. Martha Russell of Santa Cruz. Calif.; Mrs. Pearl Rus ..u ni rviur.fvi Calif- and Mrs. Clara Webb and Mr Uuian Coggswell of Long Beach. Calif. Services will be beld Monday. Jan. 4. at 2 p. m. at the W T. Riador ChaoeL The Rev. A. i Jamieson will officiate. Interment at Belcrest Memorial ParK. grounds alarm. Low Pay Noted Poor pay aiter 22 years serv-f ice a constable's maximum wage is only around 10 pounds K$28) a week and slow promotion are the main reasons leading over 200 policemen to hand in their resign nations within the past six months. But the alleged headquarters re- volt is thought due to a new di rective from Nott-Bower giving ordinary uniformed" policemen the power to do their own detective work. Hitherto, uniformed police have had to turn over to plain !-.! Jl. ;.... IV.. I.,..elitinn I1CISCU U1H - : i unable to speak VI Ca-lt J V4 tint, V. .aaw vp s Nott-Bower is oelievedjto have ordered the change to stimulate recruiting by giving the man who rounds he sidewalks a more in teresting job. Mrs MinnieS Sharpe. late resident ef 70S N. High St, at a local hos pital : Jan. 3. Survived by daughter, Mrs. Twilla i Oakey. Middletown. Conn.; sons. ?Paul Sharpe. f Spring field.j Ore., Fred Sharpe. ; Wichita Falls. Tex.. Don Sharpe. Newberry. S. C: 12 erandchildren and IS great grandciuldreni services i ,Tuesoay, Jan. 5 at 10 ajn. in the Virgil T. Golden Chanel with Interment at Belcrest Memorial Park, i . t STOXX '.; ! " . " i: - " " Joaeob'L. Stone, at the residence at Indeoendence Route 1. Dee. 31. Survived by i wife. Mrs. Klea Stone, IndeDeadence: daughters. Mrs. Mar- ruerite Evans. Grand Ronde. Ore, Mrs. Olive Gordon. Colorado Springs. frAnt Um. i Fthel- Penrose. Coulee City. Wah Mrs. Edith Penrose. Wil lamina. Mrs.- Alma Hlghtower. Monu ment, Colo, Mrs. Edna Drydale. In dependence. E Mrs. Avis LiUer. Inde Bendenre: sons. AUen Stone. Fresno, Calif.. Ernest Stone. Independence, Jay Stone, BelMower, Calif, Don - aid Stone. Salem, and Wallace Stone Independence: 43 eraoyVh'ldren and H treat erandchildren. Announce ment of service later by the Virgil T. Geld en Co. (Story also on page one.l TOKYO (JH Cpl. Claude Batche lor. the most recently repatriated PW, met his wife with a fervent embrace Sunday. 1 i The reunion brought Batchelor j and his wife together for the first time since he was captured by the Communists in November 1950, three months after he married Ky oko Araki and went to war with the First Cavalry Division. ; Kyoko was escorted to the Ar my hospital by Fred Saito, Japan ese staffer of The Associated Press bureau in Tokyo. It was to Saito that she first went for help when she wanted her .Japanese letters to her husband transmitted into English and forwarded to the pro Red camp near Panmunjom Sunday Batchelor told Kyoko her letters "brought me home to you." He had been flown back from Korea Sunday. As he came through the rear ambulance entrance of the hospital. Kyoko appeared at a side door. She uttered an inarticu late cry as she saw him striding down the long corridor and flung herself into his arms, sobbing and ! the danger of funds being cut out arbitrarily by Congress in the yearly effort to balance the fed eral budget Ellsworth introduced his bill last April 30, and the House Agri culture Committee to which it was referred requested on May 5 a report from the administra tion of, its views on the proposal. No report has yet been received. It is known that the Forest Ser vice has drafted a favorable re port on the bill, for Forest Ser vice men helped Ellsworth dratf his bill. But Secretary of Agri culture Ezra Benson has not ap proved the report nor has it been cleared by the Budget Bureau, where top policy is coordinated. Unless the administration acts favorably, no action can be ex pected by Congress .on the bill this year. In the Senate, Sen. Wayne Morse (Ind.-Ore.) has sponsored an access roads bill that would continue the present method of financing roads through annual appropriations by Congress, auth orizing up to $30,000,000 annually for five years. Has Authority : Congress currently has authori ty to appropriate sizeable amounts for access roads, but it has lacked the will to do so. According to the Forest Service, $22,25Q,000 has been appropriated in the last 10 years-r-or less than either Ells worth or Morse bills call for every year. Forest Service officials esti mate that to bring the national forests up to maximum sustained yield cutting, a program for con structing 16,700 miles of roads must be conducted at total cost to the government of about $112, 000,000. About 3,000 miles of these roads would be in Oregon and Washington national forests. But at the recent rate of appro priations, it would take 50 years i By SELIG HARRISON ! "MADURA, India UH The In dian Communist Party secretly has. mapped plans to build up. Red guerrilla forces in border areas under the guise of defense- ajainst U.S.-aided Pakistan, reliable sourc es said Sunday. j Indian government intelligence officers assigned to the third In dian Communist congress which concluded Sunday said they had uncopered "definite evidence" of guerrila plans. They said: the plans were hidden in an Unpub lished portion of the official party program adopted last week.; The Congress openly .took ad vantage of growing Indian bitter ness toward a proposed plan of American military aid to neighbor ing Pakistan by passing a resolu tion calling on all Indians to form a "united campaign against at tempts of U.S. imperialists to blackmail India to line up ibehind their war policy." Compulsory Training j The Indian Communist! Polit buro also demanded compulsory military . training as a defense measure against "American im perialist designs in Pakistan" in a resolution released Sunday. Prime Minister Nehru i is op posed to compulsory military train ing, j Intelligence sources gave t his further picture of Communist stra tegy: j The plan envisages an active parliamentary "non-violerit" pro gram, but at the same time wants "miliant units" organized in the border states facing East and West Pakistan. f To Ignore Nehu - The program urges the format tion of the guerrilla units whether not the Nehru government P-TA Leader To Be Guest At Silverton Military Roundup Valley M enm Military News From Orient Statesman Mews Service ! SILVERTON Mrs. Ethel Lind strom, Astoria, president of, the Oregon Parents-Teacher Associa tion will be a guest of the Silver ton association at Ihe latter's January meeting Thursday night at the Eugene Field auditorium. Mrs. C. B. Calkins, chairman of the P-TA Family Relations di vision, has charge of the program plans. The executive meeting of the association will be held Tuesday night at S o'clpck in the Eugene, Field libraryj with Mrs. (Alien Foster, president in charge. Rep resentatives of Silverton organi zations have been invited to this meeting to discuss consolidation of schools. Births n OZMENT To Mr. and Mrs. William E. bzment, Indepen dence, a daughter, Sunday, Jan. 3, at Saltm General Hospital. Public Records or changes its stand on compulsory training. j The idea would be to ;bring re mote tribal jungels, man' of . them near Communist Chinese; territory, under effective Communist con rol through massing arms at scat tered tribal centers. ! The plan also includes "im- MUNICIPAL COURT Roy Francis Rice, 1005 N. 15th St., charged with reckless driv ing; cited to court Four mid-valley men serving with Army units in the Far East were in the news this week with promotions, assignments f and tours. Army Cpl. Thomas i A. Blair, son of Mrs. Irene Blair of -Salem, is serving in Japan with the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team. A radio operator id Head quarters Co. of the team's 2nd Battalion, Blair entered the Army in July 1951 and joined the 187th during November 1952. f " He has been awarded the Com bat Infantryman Badge; Para chutist Badge and the Korean! and U.N. Service Ribbons. The 187th is now stationed at Beppu, Japan, as part o the se curity force for that country. Recently arriving for duty with the 3rd Infantry Division in Ko rea was Pvt. LeRoy H. Fery, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred jj. Fery, Stayton Route 1. The famous "Rock f of the Marne" division is now Undergo ing intensive post-truce j training. Fery entered the ? Army last May and completed basic train ing at Ft Ord, Calif., before be ing assigned overseas. In Japan recently for a seven day rest and recuperation leave was PFC. Richard A. punt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hunt Mill City. ; Normally stationed 3n Korea with Company L of the 2nd In fantry Division s 9lh iRegiment, Hunt stayed at one of Japan's best resort hotels j and enjoyed many luxuries unobtainable on the war-torn peninsula. I Darrell W. Walker, 22, son of Mr. , and Mrs. Darrell jE. Walker, 1937 Warner St, j ws recently promoted to corporal while serv ing with the Army's ,772nd Mili tary Police Battalion n Korea. Overseas since ; la$t April, Walker is a train security guard in Company C of the battalion which safeguards; military per sonnel and supplies being trans ported on the Korean National Railroad. "t f, Cpl. Wa'lker entered the Army in October 1952 an4 completed basic training at Cajhp Roberts, : calif. : j; i mand," he fwrote. 1 suggest that they be moved south in orderly manageable- groups and according to a phase! schedule so that they may be received at a mutually agreed upon location on the south ern boundary of the demilitarized zone." ff No Extension Hull said the Jan 22 date Is fixed "and does not depend on the holding of any political conference ... ,. is Hull blamed the breakdown of the : explanations squarely on the Communists. He accused the Reds of: IL "(A) Unreasonable and chang ing demands for facilities. "(B) Refusal to -accept reason able numbers of willing prisoners for explanations during each day. '(C) Refusal of the Korean peo ples army and Chinese peoples volunteer! to utilize , available ex plaining time unless the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission and custodian force, India con formed to all their demands which included the use of force and other impracticable actions." Hull aided "the United Nations Command, on the other hand, sup ports fully the strong stand taken by the Indian, Swedish and Swiss delegations prohibiting the use of force against defenseless pris oners." S Van Carroll, Retired Civil Engineer, Dies Van jw. Carroll, retired civil engineer, died at his home at 4595 Battle sCreek Rd., Saturday eve ning at the age of 61 years. He had been ill for several years. Borri in Decatur, Iowa, April 13, 1892, he worked for many years in Nebraska and Colorado before moving to Salem in 1936. He was a member of the Church of Christ Carroll is survived by his wi dow, Mrs. Cora E. Carroll, Salem; daughters, Mary Carroll, Denver, Colo.,! Mrs. Alice Coons -and Mrs. Jean IWelliver,. both of Salem; sons, IWerden, Donald and Van W. Carroll Jr., all of Salem; brothers, Ray Carroll, Denver, Colo.; and Lawrence Carroll, Kan sas City, Kan.; sisters, Willa Car roll, j Denver, Colo., and Ruth Hartman, Boulder, Colo. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 3 p.m. in the W. T. Rigdon Chapel. In colonial times 85 per cent of the U. S. population lived and worked on farms. Starlings (were first introduced into the United States in an ef fort to establish in the country all the birds mentioned by Shakespeare. or more to realize this goal, not i provement" of Indian Communist counting the cost all the while of i links with Burmese ' Communists necessary road and bridge repairs j as a possible channel: of arms Fair Weather Predominates! By THE ASSOCIATED f PRESS over I ! Tight Embrace ' Her fingers dug into his arms and shoulders. The tall 22-year-old Texas bent over her protectingly and mur mured into her ear. From time to time, she would raise her face, grab him by the back of the head and pull his face down-to hers. Batchelor ' kept his composure during the 10 minutes in the corri dor but she said he broke down and cried later at the hospital room reunion. "It's wonderful. Suteki. It's won derful. Suteki," he kept repeating. Suteki is Japanese for wonderful. He apparently used it to make certain she understood. Tamed en Radio "Later we turned on the little Fair weather prevailed most of the nation Sunday. Light snow fell in areas from the upper Mississippi Valley east ward across the Great Lakes to northern New England.! i s radio in the room." she told Saito. Hmw rains continued in the! Pa-. There was only classical mu- cinc jNonnwesu . r i ; From eight to IS inches of snow m a iL sic, no dance music out just me same we danced and danced, so was forecast for western Maine j happy to be together again and i up to four inches in some parts of Connecticut (and Mass achusetts. The new mass ot snow was expected from a j new storm moving into the area-from soutn Nantucket Island, Mass. . S i Colder temperatures i moved into the plains states but readings; were 5-15 degrees above normal except in some sections of the northern Great Plains. CONNECTICUT SMOKES MOST HARTFORD, Conn. UP) State tax records show Connecticut to have had the nation's highest per capitt cigarette consumption dur ing 1952. Taxable sales for: the year amounted to 3,775 cigarettes, or a traction more than 188 pack ages, for every person over 15 yean old. I " ' 1 She said she wanted "as soon as possible" to share her happiness with Batchelor's mother in Texas. Batchelor won her consent at the reunion to go soon to Texas to meet Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Batch elor and the rest of his family: , "Then." she continued 'he said to me 'We will think it over about where we will live. We will live in Japan or in the States, where you want to live."! They also planned a second hon eymoon trip, perhaps to the resort town of Atami south of Tokyo Newsmen were not permitted to question Batchelor Sunday, either at the airport after his trip from Korea or at the hospital. An Ar my spokesman - said interviews probably would not be permitted .before Tuesday at the earliest. which today eat up much of the small amounts allowed by Con gress for access, roads. Much Land Inaccessible 1 The importance of whether ad ditional roads are built into the federal forests of the Pacific Northwest is highlighted by as sertations of the lumber industry that the nation's heavy demand for increased lumber supplies is dangerously overcutting private forests because much of the fed eral forestland is inaccessible. they say that the fast dwindling supply of old growth private tim ber demands that a greater share of the region's cutting be on fed eral lands, otherwise the long balance which the region must maintain between current cut ting and new growth in order to assure a permanent : timber supply will be threatened. Consequently, two critical ad ministration decisions must be made in 1954 first, whether to endorse federally-financed access roads as a policy, and second, whether to approve either or both the Ellsworth or Morse bills. Doubts about the bills be ing approved stem from the fact that some high administration of ficials, such as Administrator Ed ward Wooiley of BLM, believe as a general principle that private smuggling to the Communist-led Vietminh forces in Indochina. Nehru is already facing serious tribal unrest on the!, northeast frontier the Abor Hills area of Assam where Indian troops were massacred last October. An emergency meeting of the Madura committee of Nehru's rul ing Congress Party warned in a resolution: "The Communists have been in. session in Madura for one reason alone to hatch a plot to create civil war in our country be ginning in the North" Pre-lnventory Trade-in Watch Sale Up to $25.00 for Your Old Watch THE JEWEL BOX 441 State St, Salem Scientists believe jjthat insects j have existed for about 250 mil lion years. DO YOU KNOW? Goodwill Industries is a sheltered workshop for handicapped people . . . Your discarded clothing and household litems will keep them independent Phone 4-2248 for Tuesday pickups in West Salem and South of Center St, Fridays North of Center St I I What's BISHOP'S Going to Do 2) Maico Hearing Aids Accepted by Council on Physical Medicine, American Medical Association. Floyd Bennett, mgr. Senator Hotel Ph. 2-0702 White Star TUNA Reg. 33c 2 '45 SAVLNG CENTER MARKETS Frankie, Ava Visiti nsAs loggers who buy federal timber should build their own roads, with the government doing it on ly in emergencies when salvage operations are necessary. Wheth er this view will prevail remains to be seen. (NEXT, Will the "partner ship" 'plan provide more electric power?) ain NEW YORK - Frank Sin atra arrived by plane Sunday from Rome where he visited his wife Ava Gardner. The crooner refused . to discuss domestic problems Sunday, but when he left Rome; Saturday he said, "we are .trying to work out our problems. Theyj spent the hoi iday season together; in Rome. The singer had said he must re port to bis studio Monday to start work on a new film. Miss Gardner announced last fall she planned to divorce Sin atra, and since then the singer has made several iattempts at reconciliaioh. However, Sinallra's mother, Dolly, said she 'got a call from Miss Gardner Sunday and that "everything is fine between them." HE ASKED FOR IT CHARLESTON. W. Va. UP) Albert Knurl was in lively mood as he slid onto the stool at his restaurant He told the waitress: A cup of coffee, s'il vous plait. Ho got the coffee along with a seafood plates ' v The European Starling was first introduced into the Amer icas in the 1890s, In 1900 only about 18 per cen of the people of the United States lived outside their native states while in 1950 about 43 per cent lived outside their native states. White ! Star TUIIA . :-r' ., Reg. j3e mm cans f 450 SAVING CENTER. MARKETS r aiaa r AV0M(G (n(D)NER ! at Severn FetlercJ f O Money placed in your ac count during the first 10 days of any month, earns trom ine 1st of thai month. Start now earning our current 3 per annum. 560 State StroQt " facing Court Hoof SALEM, 02EGON - . ' -