(Sec 1) Statesman, Scltau Ore-ITue. Sept 21, 1954
ook Blames H-Bomb
Delay on Oppenheimer
WASHINGTON P) A new book called 'The Hydrogen Bomb
.gays the United States lagged behind Russia for four years in devet-
. op: i7 hii.oiy's most powerful weapon. It puts most of the blame on
Dr. -. Robert Oppenheimer and a number of other leading atomic
. acient'cts. ' J : -. . ' . i , j
The soon-to-be-published book, by James R. Shepley and play
975 Register
I For Willamette
Fall Term
Nine htmdred and seventy-five
students have enrolled for the fall
term at Willamette University,' a
tabulation of registration figures
how2d Monday. f !,!'
Enrollment was down somewhat
over last year, when 1.038 regular
students were counted.
The school's College of Law has
enrolled 97, with late registrants
expected to raise the j total to
around 100, announces Dean
Seward Reese. 1 :i
Some 35 of these students are
new to the law school. 1 M
Last year's total enrollment fig
ure hore was 112 and the law
" school was second in size only to
TTtSrAcifr r Waehi nrH nn'i amnno
accredited law schools in the
Northwest. ' !
This term, the slight drop in
registration for the law school was
attributed by Dean Reese to the
lumber strike, which, he said.
made it difficult financially, for
some students, who depend on
such work in the summer to fin
ance their schooling in the .win
ter. --;!,. I :
Dean Reese added that some 33
pre-law schools over the nation are
represented this term jn the Col
lege of Law.
ADDroximately 300 freshmen and
transfer students registered Sat
urday, as did law students. Re
turning students enrolled Monday.
; Classes will get underway this
v morning at I. ; 1 :
1 " 1
Youths Face
Lane Charge
Two youths, one of. them from
Salem, were turned over to Lane
County sherifTs deputies Mon
day to face car theft charges in
Eugene. . i
The accused youths are Wayne
Leo Standish, 19, of 2465 N. 4th
St, and Kenneth Ray Spears, 18,
of Sayre, Okla. They were. attest!
ed Friday by State Police near
Aurora in a car that i had been
reported stolen from a Eugene
man. -: ' I :.'!
Standish and Spears were held
In the Marion County jail on
charges of driving without opera
tors' licenses. They were return
ed to Lane County on warrants
charging them with larceny by
bailee. , : j 1 , i
Hood River. Cabin
Fire Kills Man 1
HOOD RIVER tf Frank Lee
Cottingham, 74, suffocated in a cab
in fire Monday at the Lew Men
orchard near Parkdale, about IS
miles south of here. I i j i
Acting Coroner Jack McCue said
it appeared Cottingham had been
knocked unconscious by an explo
sion while using gasoline to light
a stove. The body had first , and
second-degree burns, but they were
sot the cause of death, McCue said.
Nearby residents called j the
Parkdal fire department when they
were unable to enter the cabin.
The fire was quelled in a few min
utes. , ..
Ticket Sales for
Police Film Start
Ticket sales began Monday for
the Salem Police Department's
benefit showing of the color mov
ie "Alaska, America's Wonder
land." . . i
All police officers are supplied
with tickets for the movie, which
will be shown in North Salem
High School Sept 29 and 30 and
Oct 1 and 2. Tickets can also be
obtained at the police station in
City Halt j i
Portland Girl
Feared Drowned
PORTLAND ( ttiomasirie
Gibbs, 13, of Sherwood, disap
peared on a swimming outing at
the Tualatin Rivet Monday and
was believed drowned.
Her sister Nadine, 14. and : a
friend, David Smith, 16, said the
Sirl started to swim downstream
and then failed to answer their
shouts. . : ; . M : j
"Dance For Fun"
Introducing tkt
4 ' i I .
K-Dot Dance Studio
Salem's Newest and
Most Distinctive
SPEfJAl OFFER
1 Dance Analysis
2 hrs. Printe
iBitrnctioa
10hrs.Gass
Instruction
Studio Parties
FOR ONLY
Offer Good Until. Oct 1st
Ph. J-26S7 For Appointment
4135 Portland Road ,
(1 ML North ef Under Pass)
I !
m
.Blair Jr.; contends "It was an ac
cident bordering almost on the mi
raculous"; that this country caught
up with and passed the Soviets,
who set : off a droppable H-bomb
six months before ine umtea
States did. I : ' S
At Princeton, N. J.,' Oppenhel-,
mer said he hasn't seen the book.
He had no other comment. f
Both authors of "The Hydrogen
Bomb" are Time magazine staff
members. Shepley. heads Time's
Washington I Bureau. : The book,
copyrighted by the authors, is to
be published by the David McKay
Co.! Inc.; of New York. Lengthy
excerpts appear in the current is
sue of U: S. News St World Report
magazine.- i 1 j , j
War Correspondent i j
Shepley, war correspondent and
later an Army captain, served for
two years as an aide to Geo.
George C. Marshall and went with
Marshall on the general's mission
to China.' Blair served in the Navy
in World War U. !
U. S. News k World Report said
they "had access to official
sources.: spent months of research"
on the H-bomb problem. It said
"Many of the officials concerned
have read advance copies of the
book arid furnished corroborative
data to: the authors." j
(The authors put the blame on
a number of factors for this coun
try's 1 failure to press ahead with
H-bomb development as soon as
Russia exploded its first atomic
weapon. They say President Tru
man was "evasive" at first, the
Air Force indifferent, the preva
lent Washington attitude one of
confusion. f
By far the biggest obstacle in
this country, Shepley and Blair
say was, a solid "wall of opposi
tion" put up by Oppenheimer and
various other : scientists who, the
book says, ultimately were proved
wrong in their calculations when
Dr. Edward Teller came up With
a theory about , how j the H-bomb
could be built successfully!. f
The book savs there is no evi
dence Oppenheimer 'took '"overt
action" to persuade scientists at
the Los Alamos Weapons Labora
tory "to strike against the Presi
dent's decision." But it says: 1
There seems to be no question
that his opposition
. was sig
widespread nificent to produce
reaction."
Dissolution of
Docrnbecher
Firm Voted
PORTLAND Stockholders
of the Doernbecher "Manufacturing
Co.,! a I furniture factory, voted
Monday to dissolve the firm, j
E. S. Beach, secretary-treasurer.
said 79: per cent of the stockhold
ers turned up at a special meet
ing and voted unanimously to j liq
uidate the firm, which had a net
book worth on June 30 of $4,087.-
000." I
Beach said it would take about
four months to use up present
stocks, ; and the firm would con
tinue to operate in that period
About 400 are employed at the
plant. I : t !-... : " - j
Besides the plant at Portland,! a
sawmill four miles south of Ore
gon City and timber-cuttinff rights
near Reedsport are to be soldi
Beach said the firm Would like
to sell, the . entire package, but
would sell piece-meal if no single
buyer can be found. !
The firm, established in 1900, de
cided in 1937 to sell out At that
time the plant employed 1,500 men.
The plan was dropped then, how
verp without explanation, and the
firm continued in operation. , j
OPPOSE DRAFT ! - '- - I !
LEXINGTON, Ky. UH ' The
Woman's Christian Temperance
Union I adopted a legislative pro
gram Monday that included oppo
sition to "peacetime conscription
of men, women or youth. j j
TAX LAWS DISCUSSED I I
GEARHART The Oregon
Tax institute, an organization i of
accountants, heard federal tax
laws discussed at the opening ses
sion of its four-day meeting here
Monday. f 1 j I
Now Playing Open f :4S
"Flame i and
the Flesh"
Lana Turner
' Carlos Thompson
"Jivoro"
- Rhonda Fleming
, Fernanda Lamas
CAPITOL
I GOLOK 1
r Jam Howard
POWELL- KEEL-
M Mutt In Tyt -1mm t
V Plus J
Paul Doaglas ta
"The Sable Scarf
"The TWevinf
Magpies" 1
An Overture in
Cinemascope
1
Tribute Paid
Hedda Swart
' 1 ' j : ' -' '
! A tribute was paid in Marion
County' Court Monday to' Hedda
Swart, county, engineer, who died
Saturday. ,
county business were "always in
the j public interest," said Judge
Rex Hartley. j
Judge Hartley expressed the
loss felt by the court as well as
by the public in Swart's death.
1 1 Funeral services for Swart will
be held at 10:30 this morning in
the I Clough-Barrick ChapeL Pri
vate; burial services will follow at
City View Cemetery, the Rev.
George Swift officiating..
; . j . h
Chile Declares
Siege, Fears
Red Menace
: - i i.
J, : I . 1; V !
? SANTIAGO, Chile (Ji The Chi
lean government declared a state
of siege (modified martial law
throughout most of the country
Monday. - President Carlos Ibanez
said it was evident Communist ele
ments planned to carry out a pro
gram of violence. 1 j
The government apparently
made tip its mind to grasp addi
tional powers, despite objections
by the opposition in Congress, when
a group of demonstrators at the
Northern Chilean copper town of
Potrerillos ripped down the Chilean
flag Monday morning, shouting:
'We are Communists; not Chile'
ans." -, ' .. - f :;
; Caches of dynamite were report'
edfound later at the mine, run by
a subsidiary , of the American
owned Anaconda Copper Mining
Co. ! i
The Communist Party is out
lawed in Chile. j
The governments move , was a
surprise since labor troubles in the
copper fields which have crippled
the country's economy for about a
month appeared nearing a settle
ment.
(In Washington, diplomatic
sources expressed the view Ibanez
had decreed the state of siege to
get powers for dealing with the
strike which the Chilean congress
denied him last week. The Con
gress, in which Ibanez lackk a ma
jority, ended its regular cession
Saturday.
Narcotics Officers
' . lis
Discuss Charges
Against Hormel
attorney Monday to debate what
charges will be lodged against
piano-playing heir George A. Hor
mel II and his peppery girl mend.
starlet Rita Moreno.
Dist. Atty. 5. Ernest Roll as
sumed personal charge of investi
gation and summoned arresting
officers and interested attorneys
to confer with him on the case
Det. Sgt. John E. O'Grady and
State Narcotics Inspector Matthew
O'Connor informed Roll they pos
sessed a 12 -minute wire recording
of Hormel s statement after his
arrest early Sunday on suspicion
of possessing 13 marijuana cisa
rettes. The officers said they found
the cigarettes in Hormera car.
Among those seeing Roll was
Hormel's attorney, Bentley i Har
ris. "If a complaint issues," Har
ris said. "We. will plead not guil
ty land fight the case right down
the line."
He said Hormel has gone out
of! town for a day or two. The
25-year-old heir to the meat pack
ing millions is due in Superior
Court Thursday to answer a writ
of habeas corpus. He is free un
der $1,500 bond.
DRIVE-IN TIIEAItlE -ml Wsm-
21
- V Ph. 2 -
UUSM tAUim. MICHWAY tfl
, Gates Open t:4S
Show at 7:00
, STARTS TOMORROW
i ALL COLOR PROGRAM
.I ALAN LADD - JOAN TETZEL
J - ! ia i i !
"HELL BELOW ZERO;'
- " ! ALSO ' r I f v : I
JOEL McCREA MARI BLANCH ARD ,
"BLACK HORSE CAN YOMf
FOtt!
V
Aatarica'i
L
IS rvnr.f
A Ml
Y
Kafineet 80 Evtningj
IY V
Mrs. Walker,
State Native,
Dies in Fall
- - - i i
SUtMinaa Newt Serric I '
MT, ANGEL Mrs. Anna
Walker, 63, ai life-long resident of
Oregon, died Monday afternoon
while being taken to a hospital
after falling down the stairs in
her home, i I
: 3
Mrs. Walker was born July 28,
1881, in Portland. Shef lived in
Mt Angel since she was a small
girl, when her parents,! Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Wilke, moved to Mt
Angel. . ,
She was married May 23, 1911,
to the late Joseph Walker, who
operated a ; farm and hop ranch
near Mt AngeL He died in July,
1946. 1 ! " ! .
Mrs. Walker remained on the
farm until 1952, when she moved .
to her home in Mt AngeL She
was a member of the' Catholic
Daughters, the St Anne Society
and Mt Angel Garden Club.
Survivors include Mrs. Walk
er's mother, Mrs. Anna j Wilke of
Mt Angel; five daughters, Mrs.
Florence Butsch, Mrs. ..Agnes
Smith and Mrs. Gertrude Volz, all
of Mt Angel, Mrs. Shirley Equal!
of Woodburn and Mrs. I Lorraine
Lulay of Scio: and three sons.
Joseph Walker, Mt Angel, Ernest
Walker, San Diego, and Charles
Walker of Los Angeles; and 29
grandchildren, i f
Mrs. Walker is also survived by
three brothers, Frank and Louis
Wilke of Portland and Emil
Wilke, Hines; and two sisters,
Mrs. Anthony Duda, Gervais, and
Mrs. John Tick, Woodburn.
Ford Stock
Dividends Up
i 8:
NEW YORK (UP) Ford Motor
Co. boosted dividend payments to
its select stockholders last year to
$15 per share frbm the $10 a share
paid in 1951 and 1952.
This was revealed in; the newly
issued annual report of the Ford
Foundaton, Ford's biggest stock
holder and the world's .largest
private foundation. '
The founaation , owns 3,089,908
shares, all non-voting, while near
ly all the rest of the 3,452,900 out
standing s ha r e s. including ail
voting stock, is owned by the Ford
family. . u
Wall Street watched the dividend
increase with particular interest.
Much of the Ford stock now owned
by the foundation is expected to be
offered to the public sometime
next year i I
Informed sources believe mat
Ford dividends have been running
far below profits and estimate that
earnings for 1954 will approach 200
million dollars. At: this level, they
would equal about $58 per share.
Troller's Body
Believed Found
ASTORIA (UP) U A badly de
composed j body Jwas recovered
Sunday from the surf a half-mile
north of Klipsan beach on the Ore
gon coast by a surf fisherman.
Authorities herej said the body
was believed to be that of Willard
Tompkins ; of Newport , who. with
his brother, Harold, was drowned
last March when the Troller Flora
went down in thej Columbia river
off Hammond. Ore. The other body
was recovered inj May.
NEGOTIATIONS fcRESSED
ROME, Italy fl The United
States is pressing Italy hard to
bring a quick end ! to prolonged
negotiations with (Yugoslavia over
the future, of Trieste, a reliable
Italian source said Monday night
ENDS TpNITE
Clifton Tebb I
; Also
Jane Wyman
"SO BIG
7829
now
PLAYIKG!
U.THE WORLD'S
LOST TRIBE!
1 .'. ,
Mwl rtaHHv (
i i-
NFW MTf
una kit
1:
$1.00 i OtHdrta 20
At the Theaters
-1
ELSIXOEK T
-MAN IN A MILLION" with
Gregory Peek
"PERSONAL AJTAIR" with
Cen Tierney and Leo Genn -.
CAPITOL
"SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN
BROTHERS," in Gloriou Cinema-
MOpe ; . :
"THE SABLE SCARF" with
Paul Douglas i j
GRAND
. -KARAMOJA" I I
"HALF WAY TO HELL j
HOLLYWOOD
fTHE FLAME AND VHE
FLESH" with . Lana Turner and
Carlo Thompson .
"JTVABO- with Fernando La -mat
an Rhonda Fleming
NORTH SALEM DRIVE. IN
"MR. SCOUTMASTER" with'
Clifton Webb and Edmond Gwenn
."FRANCIS JOINS THE WACS"
with Donald O'Connor and Julia I
Adama :
Huge Fireball
f No Ordinary
Meteorite9 !
ALBUQUERQUE. N.M., (UP)-
Dr. Lincoln la Paz. meteorologist
at the University of New Mexico,
concluded Monday that a great
fireball seen in skies throughout
the western part of the i nation
Saturday was "something queer"
and not just an ordinary meteorite.
He made the observation 'after
spending the day in the Chico hills
interviewing persons who reported
seeing the object about 8:40 p.m.
Saturday. j "
.The Traffic Control Center at the
municipal airport here'reported it
was flooded with; calls Saturday
night by persons who observed the
aerial display. ! t
A spokesman said most of them
reported seeing a ''big ball of fire"
shoot across the! sky, from the
northeast to the southwest
In Santa Fe. one woman. tnlH
United Press she1 saw what looked
like a "big ball of fire with a green
tail trailing along behind."
Dr. la Pax said Monday the
Saturday night display wasn't from
an ordinary meteorite because it
was accompanied by no sound, as
meteorites are. i
He : said it wasn't an ordinary
nreoau oecause it left a luminous
cloud visible for as much as 30
minutes. M I
It was reported by persons in
Springer, Farley and Raton in New
Mexico as well as in Arizona, Cali
fornia and other Western states.
Gervais Man
Romifl Ovpri !
h - i I
Joe Wesley Moses, 23, Gervais,
was bound over to the grand jury
Monday in Marion County district
court on a charge of burglary not
in a dwelling, i t , M
Moses,, who was arrested Sun
day by Salem police, is accused
of taking part in the theft of mer
chandise July 21 from Duvall's
Grocery, 1198 N.! 17th St He was
committed. to the county jail to
await the grand jury hearing.
Bail has been set at $2,500. ;
ZELLNER NAMED
Wesley E. Zellner, Salem, of
research and statistics section of
the State Unemployment Compen
sation Commission, has been nam
ed on the convention site commit
tee for the International Associa
tion of Personnel in Employment
Security, which' will meet in Cin
cinnati in 1955, and in Toronto,
Ontario, in 1956.
NOW PLAYING!
j5rApniirn cnocDirc
I rs KjMaM WVMBM Will HIV
W9 fffW i
ncMmmn um. ctfhtib
Also
T1ERNEY
UO GfNN i GIYK1S JOHNS
I
1
Death Takes
J. K. Chastain
John K. Chastain. 70, of 253 Cen
ter St., died Monday evening of
a heart attack after spending the
day picking beans. He suffered the
attack while visiting at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. George Schwei-
gert. 963 Edina Ave. i
Mr. Chastain's sister. Mrs. R. L.
Goss, 125 E. Rural Ave., said her.
had had previous attacks. He was
pronounced dead by city first aid
attendants who were called to the
Schweigert home. I
Born April 21. 1884. in Phoenix.
Ore., Mr. Chastain spent most of
his life in Klamath County and in
the Sacramento Valley, California.
He came to Salem about five years
ago after living in Portland.
Mr. Chastain is survived by six
children living in California. Other
survivors include three sisters,
Mrs. A. T. Langell and Mrs. Etta
Kilgore of Klamath Falls' and Mrs.
Goss. and a brother, Claude P.
Chastain of Seasides ,
, Howell-Edwards Funeral Home
is in charge of funeral arrange
ments.; 1
catfon
WASHINGTON J The Civil
Aeronautics Board Monday reject
ed an application of United Air
Lines for immediate authority to
suspend service temporarily at The
Dalles. Ore. i
Instead, the board ordered the
request set for j Texpeditious
hearing." It said the application
raised complex issues which could
be resolved only in a certificate
proceeding : f
United i said business at the
Dalles has been so poor it suffered
a loss of $15,000 there in the 12
month period ending last March 31.
The Dalles' Chamber of Commerce
and The Dalles City had filed pro
tests asking denial! of the suspen
sion application. ) i
Bar Association
Approves Series
Of Legal Courses
The Marion County Bar Asso
ciation has given its final approv
al to a series or legal education
courses to be sponsored and con
ducted by it at the Willamette
University College of Law during
the coming scholastic year.
The series will be called "Wil
lamette Law Institutes' in honor
of the schooL With the coopera
tion of Dean Seward Reese and
his faculty, the program and con-
uuuuig icgat cuucauou commii-
tee of the local bar association,
composed of Peter M. Gunnar.
chairman, Roy Hirland and Wolf
Von Otterstedt, has arranged 15
courses of study. (
SPECIAL
DEMOilSTMIIOIl
Tuesday Only
Open 10 A.M; to 8 P.M.
Jim Lansing
. SPEAKERS
ENCLOSURES
For the Finest
U Hi-Fi Equipment
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TV ;
r ?:
442 N. Church
ALASKA ;
America's Wonderland
Real Life Color FOam
Sponsored By
SALEM POLICE
DEPARTMENT
NORTH SALEM
HIGH SCHOOL
14th and "D" Streets
September 29-39
October 1-2 1:99 T. M.
' TickeU On! Sale At
! ,. y Police Department
GAA Rejects
Apjpli
Development of Cereal Seed
Suggested for Valley Area
By LiLLIE L. MADSEN
Farm Editor, The Statesman
Possibility of developing pure cereal seed for seed use rather
than for feed in the Willamette Valley, was suggested by Harry
Schoth, USDA agronomist, Monday night . .
Schoth was one of the speakers at the annual Marion County
Crops Outlook meeting held at the Marion' County Courthouse and
attended by more than 100 farmers. . - i
It's almost impossible to buy;
pure cereal seed ol any one
brand. Hannchan Barley is the
only seed, outside of oats, that
has maintained pure strains.'
There should be a good market at
a little premium for such: seed,
Schoth said.
Left in Field
Crimson clover is difficult to
harvest, with 60 per cent of it
remaining in the field. However,
new machinery for harvesting this
is now being developed. Austrian
field peas is "on the way out".
because the south is "weaning it
self from peas and turning to
Wooley Pod Vetch. This might
be produced in small quantity
here for the southern market.
Schoth said. f1
Alfa fescue is one of the few
grasses that we n't through, the
severe drought the past two years
in the south, and this has increas
ed demand for it, according to
Ray Teal and Marion Thomas, ex
tension economists, Oregon State
College. j
Growers who have good, clean
fields of Alta fescue, were en
couraged to stay with them.
The hairy vetch outlook, accord
ing to. Teak was rather f poor,"
with over 30 million pounds in
government stock about two
year's supply. ' ' I
Supply on Hand ?
A large supply of chewings fes
cue on hand is depressing that
market, . although this may be
changed by lack of production
elsewhere, Thomas said,! as he
added that he looked for the
chewings rdarket "to be rather
poor for another three or four
years."
- The outlook for fall-seeded ce
real crops is on a downward pat
tern, Thomas went on. The wheat
loan price next year will be $2
06. Thomas predicted' somewhat
lower 1955 prices for barley and
oats, too, due to the lifting of re
strictions on diverted crop acres,
which will continue at high acre
age production for each crop.
Pigs will eventually, Thomas
thought, "eat our wayLout of the
grain difficulty" but hog prices
will suffer in consequence.
Wool prices will continue good
for the next three or four years,
but cattle prices will go lower,
Production of prennial rye grass
has increased so much that "grow
ers had better look out for 1956
and 1957," Thomas added.
Hollis Oattawy, Marion County
extension. agent, was chairman of
the evening's program.
Melbourne and Sydney,
Austra-
Lia are the only cities
in that
country with more than a
population. ' I
million
Has the Best Parking Facilities in downtown Salem. At the
corner ef Marion and N. Commercial street you can drive
right up to our door! any rime and find ample parking. If
you lack the penny just come in and get one FREE1
Doubls Green Stamps Saturday Only
Latex Rubber Gloves
With Patches
Reg. S5c Now
490
Synthetic Rubber
Gloves
Reg. 39c
Now..
..... 150
Clear Plastic Aprons
Drip Protector Bot
tom; Reg. SL79
Pigskin Facet!
Work Gloves
Reg. SL49 ,
9B0
Now..
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Moleskin Faced j mfC A
Reg. S15; New... I VV
Fresh Deodorant
Reg. o OClji
27c; Now..
for wy.
I Liquid Shinola
Reg. I5e ' j QA
Now : w
Energine Shoe White
200
, Trusted 78,000 Times
Xet, we have filled ever 7S.000 prescriptions. Not tee startling 1
a number, unless yen consider the distance oar loyal customers!
bring them from ear good friends, the doctors. We have!
ever considered it necessary to furnish doctors with pre!
scriptiea blanks saying Take this to So and Se's Pharmacy,
as most customers realize that they have the right to take;
their prescription to their favorite druggist. To the many,
doctors whe ase their ewa blanks and give as a break ia the :
filling of their prescriptions we wish to publicly thank them
rr their fairness.
I i CARL L. WELLMAN, Owner
HEM
MARKET DRUG STORE
' 490 N. Commercial at Marion
U.S. Agrees
To European
Army Talks
WASHINGTON iff - The United
States agreed Monday to join eight
other nations; in a discussion next
week of German rearmament, a
key to plans for erecting anti -
communist , defenses in Western 5
Europe. -
The ' government accepted for- i
mally an invitation sent out by
Britain for a conference which will
be held on Sept. 28.
A State Department official said
Dulles, back only two days from ;
visits with West German and Brit
ish leaders, "hopes" to be able to
leave here for London on Saturday.
Shortly after the U.S. announce
ment West Germany's Chancellor,
Konrad Adenauer, announced his
acceptance of the invitation.
PROTEST PICKETING
SEATTLE m Eight 'maritime
Unions picketing here in protest
against the authorized transfer of
80 ships to foreign registry de
cided to permit the freighter Del-1
phi to sailMonday night for Los
Angeles and Peru. 1
FRANKIE
SAYS:
"This Oregon Rose Bowl talk
has given me an idea Salem
should have a Sraorgasburger
Bowl i for the world's two
'beefiest' football teams, to
honor our big beef sandwich,
the Giant Smorgasburger. Free
smorgasburgers, with all the
trimmings would be served to
ne and all."
BARCLAY'S
BROILER
In the CaBdalaria District
Adjacent to the Dairy Qneea
Sonthioa 99 . .
'
WW .
Wollman's Market
Drug Store
All Chewing Gum
3 , 100
j 5c Candy Bars
, 6 for 250
1 f I
f, Pencils
12 f.r 390
Tooth Powder
Reg. 50e
New..........
1S0
Rubbing Alcohol
Reg. 50c
Now....
190
Chloradent
Tooth Paste
Reg. v o COA
43c? Now..
mm or
Colgate Tooth Paste
:17c; New. 2 for 390
1 Beacon Pocket
Watch
Guaranteed Sf OQ
! Reg. Si25; Now !