' 2 Sec 1 Statesman, Solam. Or., Tum Not. 16. 1954 Knowland Asserts 'Coexistence' Will Bring Red Victory WASHINGTON ? Senate Re publican Leader Knowland of Cal ifornia told the Senate Monday that "coexistence and atomic stale mate" with Russia "will result in an ultimate Communist yictory." He called for a congressional re view ; of U.S. foreign policy, aa B y anymore s Stage Career Began at Age 5 .(Story also on page; 1.) HOLLYWOOD The death of veteran actor Lionel Barrymore Monday ight ended a career which had risen above many difficulties. Lionel may have been down many times,' but he never was out. His voice as "Dr. Gillespie" was known the breadtn of thei land in the "Dr. Kildare" radio series! and his renditions at the holiday sea son of Dickens . crusty Scrpog were no less lamous. tf Son of the celebrated theatrical team of Maurice and Georgia Drew Barrymore, Lionel was born In - Philadelphia. Brother of i the freat John and of the famous Eth el, the shaggy-browed ! veteran made his stage debut at the age of He was educated in New York and by private tutors, and attend ed Seton Hall, at Orange, N. J., where he came to know f Thomas A. Edison. ! I 5 As a youth he appeared on the stage with his grandmother, Loui sa Drew, but quit to study art in Paris. Returning, he was an illus trator for a year, then joined his brother. John in "Peter Ibbetson." No Question of Forte There never was any question of his forte. He became a star with his performance in "The Copper head." Next in "The Claw,", he appeared with Irene Fenwick. :; They were together tin "Laagh. Clown Laugh," and were married in 1923. Their romance until : her death in 1936 was one of ideal devotion and happiness, f s In 1926, he joined Metro-Gold-wyn-Mayer to star in "The Bar rier." When sound came to the screen, Barrymore turned to di recting. He triumphed with "Con fession," and is credited with be ing the first to use a moving mi crophone en a sound stage. : He directed "The Rogue Song," with Lawrence Tibbett; Ten Cents a ' Dance,' with Barbara Stanyickjtben returned to aqtiogJ in "Madam X,- with Ruth Char terton. ' ! Barrymore won an academy award for his performance in "A Free Soul," with Norma Shearer, in 1931. He gave the screen some of its most memorable moments in "Grand Hotel." "Rasputin And The Empress." "Dinner At f Eight," "David Copperfield," "Ah. Wilder ness," "The Return of Peter Grimm" and "Captains Courage ous." . -' . -. (, ; , v-: Versatile ' j Mi;' The actor was -versatilel in other fields, as welL His etchings ranked him among foremost artists of the day, and he was also a composer of note. : i " Barrymore was the recipient of many honors, including the Speech Arts Medal, which he received in 1938. Each year for a decade he broadcast the role of Scrooge in "A Christmas Carol." He also pub lished a book. "We Barrymores as told to, Cameron Shipp, in which he traced the background and ex periences of the famous theatrical family. - ' Many Injuries . 11 . In his later years Barrymore was beset by many injuries. Twice he suffered hip fractures. He walked . with crutches for a long time and he had been I a .wheel chair invalid for several; years.' Lionel's copperplate etchings and "waterfront scenes, made in California, were widely exhibited. Wheri his printer died and his cop perplates became lost he. turned to musical composition. Y ' - His "tableua russe," J"prelude and fugue" and other compositions were played by symphony orches tras here and in New York. ' $ i it) "THE LAST TIME I SAW PARIS"..! "it was Spring r , knd I wasinloye .,. with a stranger!" tl-6-kt's Techaicolor renantt starriag ELIZABETH TAYLOR.VAN IQHPfSCH WALTER P1DGE0N . DONNA REED COMING FOR THANKSGIVING TO idea which was promptly endorsed by Democratic leader Lyndon John son of Texas. ; ', I 'I'm afraid today' that! we are: weaker than we should be," John-: sm said, j in - tee ensuing debate. : some Democrats on the Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees argued Knowland was making a good case against the Eisenhower administration's cut jn the defense budget i .; ' ; I I i Knowland did not concede their point that the armed forces had been weakened, but he agreed with the Democrats that this country must be able to negotiate with the Russians "from" position of strength." ' -J k j . 1 No Preventive Attack I . He said emphatically that he was not advocating that the. United States attack Russia to prevent an atomic stalemate, j ! Russia is pushing the i idea of 'peaceful coexistence" to gain time to achieve the stalemate and the nibbling away of more nations, Knowland 'said. ' 1 : He added that the Soviet target date probably is between 1957 and I960. ' ....-'-'! , I ' The Senate GOP chief called for congressional committees I to sum-i moo State and Defense Department officials to inquire fully into pres-i ent foreign and defense policy and determine "whether this clear and present danger, which appears to me to exist is such that a basic change in the direction of our pol-i! tno is o anf . $ Breaks Into Debate f Knowland broke into the Mc Carthy censure debate to make' his address. It was the first interrup tion on a topic alien to that de bate, i ' i The speech seemed to put Know land at least partly at odds with President Eisenhower on policy ttward , the Soviet Union. i : r: Two Flights Arctic Route i 1 i ' COPENHAGEN., Denmark (fl The i trail blazing . Scandinavian Airlines i System's Super-Cloud- master Royal V3ring landed at Copenhagen's Kastrup Airport at 9:22 a.m. Tuesday, inaueuratin the world's first commercial pas senger service across the top of the world. I COPENHAGEN, Denmark W -J A Scandinavian " Airlines ; Super Cloudraaster carrying three Prime Ministers and a Danish prince tcok off into thei chilly darkness Monday night for Los ! Angeles, launching the first east-to-west i commercial passenger service across the top of the world. -. At the same time another SAS Super-Cloudmaster, which has left Los Angeles about 11 hours ear Her. was wingmg its way , to Co penhagen with a group of import ant civic officials, movie stirs; and newsmen to initiate the west-to-east flight. ; ; , . Aboard the airliner Helge Viking when it took off from here at 8:10 p.m. were Prince Axel of Den mark, Prime Ministers Hans Hed toft of Denmark, Oscari Torp of Norway, and Tage Erlander of Sweden, SAS chairman i Per M, Hansson, SAS President! Per A. Norlin and newsmen. Lt. Col. Bernt Balcben. Norwe gian-born 'American citizen who participated in U.S. Adrai Richard E, Byrd's historical 1929 flight to the South Pole, said the first com mercial flight of 5,800 miles from Europe to Southern California; should be considered the "gate way to the world." i i A sister plane, the Royl Viking, took off from Los 'Angeles at 12:03 a.m., shortly after actress Cyd Charisse, had christened her with a bottle of champagne. I .T J t STARTS r - rihe sj CI iauu nrew ELAINE STEWART. U 1 A-t tdTTmZrrrt 2rt madMtcois ALL-TIME BEST SELLER AS A NOVEL UNFORGETTABLE ON THE SCREEN! OfBubdisq: Crusoe Two Petitions On Penal Site Gain Signers (Story also on page 1, section 1.) The State Board of Control will receive a petition today in which about 200 persons argue that an intermediate penal institution on the Keppinger farm site near Ger vais would be a hazard to the safety of the area. Later in the week, ifs schedul ed to receive another petition in which 200 different persons say they'd be delighted to have the state institution in their neigh borhood. : The disagreement, latest of sev eral to center on the state re formatory since it was approved two years ago, has been building up since September, when an un official meeting in Gervais result ed in a majority of the partici pants agreeing that the reforma tory would have a beneficial' ef fect on business in the commu nity. I I Farmers Opposed Farmers whose property Is lo cated near the proposed site have since opposed the institution "on the ground that prisoners could easily escape onto, their land through brushy and swampy areas. I Perry Buren, attorney for the group opposing the reformatory, said Monday that the owners of 60 per cent of the acreage around the proposed site have signed petitions asking the state to locate the institution elsewhere. A leader of the group favoring the reformatory, Emil Ronner, argued that many farmers have signed petitions asking the board to locate the reformatory on the Gervais site; : .v Residence Cited ' Of 231 signers, be said, only 81 are residents of. Gervais. The rest live in rural areas near the com munity, he said. Ronner, a member of toe city council, said his activity with the citizen's committee favoring the reformatory was completely un official and that be was not acting as si representative of the city gov ernment Among the arguments Advanced in favor of bringing the reforma tory.1 into the Gervais area are claims that visitors and employes would become customers of Ger vais stores and; that home-building by employes would increase prop erty values. , Escapes Feared Opponents of the reformatory argue that it would be easy for inmates to escape from the site and say the institution would re sult in property values failing. , la their petition filed Monday, the opponents requested a bearing to present their arguments before the Board of Control. The proposed site would take In the A. W. Kippinger farm and three amaUer adjoining farms in an area near the intersection of the Pacific Highway and the Gervais-ML Angel highway. Re ported total price for the property is $174,000. Police School To Instruct in Self Defense , Nine Salem police officers will get advice from experts today on how to defend themselves when arresting unruly lawbreakers. The city officers also are scheduled to receive training in the use of pis tols during the day's session of the Police Basic Training school, which is being conducted this week in Salem City HalL In Monday's class, introductory meeting of the school, the offi cers heard talks on the job 'of law enforcement and the law of arrest, search and seizure. Speak er was Lt. Thomas W. Simmons of the Portland Police Depart ment I Instructors today will be FBI agents Max . Taylor and Len If. Kurtz. Students in the school are new police officers who have not ihad previous training. ES33 I TODAY! Here is ROMANCE and ADVENTURE .SPECTACLE and EXCITEMENT-. beyond your wildest dreams! cnavemires or Sasdfa SAXlTlKFCrS Immwtd Caak High Court I Spliton Indian Burial Issue I WASHINGTON V-The Supreme Court divided i 4-4 Monday,! on whether a cemetery may be sued for damages for refusing burial to an American Indian killed in Ar my service in Korea. , ; f The tie vote upheld a decision of the Iowa Supreme Court that Mrs. Evelyn Rice, white; widow of ,Sgt. John Rice, had no right to sue the Sioux City Memorial Park Ceme tery for $180,000. 1 After graveside ! services, the cemetery notified Mrs. Rice that her husband's body would not be lowered into the grave. Burial was refused on the ground the widow had signed a contract which' re stricted use of the cemetery to Caucasians. I 1 The case atUacted widespread attention and former President Truman invited the! widow to send the body to Arlington National Cemetery, where lie many of thei nation's heroes. Full military hon ors accompanied the Arlington bur ial of Sgt Rice. I i The tie vote in; the Supreme Court was made possible by the death of Justice Robert H. Jack son, which reduced the court's membership from 9 to 8. It was not announced how the eight! jus tices voted individually. Mrs. Rsce has 25 days in which to ask for reconsideration. It is conceivable that by that time1; the senate may have confirmed Presi dent Eisenhower s i nomination of John Marshall Harlan. i Minor Blasts Shake Blazing ison FARMINGTON, W. Va. UR Workmen labored I with a huge crane late Monday to complete! capping a ventilating shaft blown open by two new explosions in a coal mine where 15 men were en tombed. The Jamison Coal Co. No. t mine had been sealed off Sunday night after a violent explosion and; fire Saturday which trapped the 15 men deep underground and killed a 16th man on the surface. It was West Virginia's worst mine tragedy in 10 years. ; Monday, two s minor blasts boomed inside the diggings, push ins aside the huge steel plate on the air shaft as well as one on the main shaft of thei slope mine lo cated in a valley of North-Central West Virginia. ' i 1 WATCH FOR Th Most I LovoabU Hero i Never to Appear Bofor an Audioncol COMING SOON ! s Get your tickets at: Flower: Box Florist. Alexanders, or Stevens ft Son. Jewelers, or at the per formance. - The makers m- ! . . : . I - -'h ?:-?K' - ' 3 " ' --: 1 . - ' ''V . v'' ,-m.U i ... .ii ii iwiin.r ..,.......l , . a. j. asTMOLaa tobacc wiasTe.sLaa, n. c Winstons cost less than most filter cigarettes! Engineers Say Utilities Loan Not Acceptable WASHINGTON W) The Corps of . Engineers generally does not accept loan offers, such as was made Saturday by three Pacific Northwest private utilities for use in getting planning started for the John Day Dam, Brig. Gen. E, V. Itschner reported Monday. . j ' Itschner, assistant chief engi neer, saM: "Our general policy has been Trot to accept private funds that might be construed as an effort to commit us to place one project ahead of another." Itschner said the corps had been notified in advance of the offer announced Saturday by Portland General Electric Co., Pacific Pow er and Light Co. and Washington Water Power Co. j He ' said . Army Secretary Robert I T. Stevens would have to make the final de cision. Ike Launches aign to End Slums WASHINGTON i President Eisenhower launched a campaizii Monday to spruce up the nation's neighborhoods. 'He set it off at a luncheon of the I American Council To Improve Our ' Neighborhoods, a new, non profit, privately supported organi zation dedicated t to removing slums and maintaining ; a high standard of housing. .' "With a million houses becoming slums every year," the President said, "to find local people doing something to stop this economic deteriorating is wonderful. "It is even more wonderful that this - effort can help to stop an erosion, of the pride and. decency of every American." Camp STARTS TOMORROW rfjgiw All TEL ' LOOSE! 2nd Urn vimm in i i ii f 1 1 i w aw ai mm m m. m mm mr of CAMELS present: 1 . "O MUSIC that brings flavor back Made At The Theaters i. M ELSINOKK ;;- i 1 11 -THREE HOURS TO KTXX." with Dana Andrews and Doana "A BU1XJET IS WAITING with Jean Simmons and Kory Cal- noun i ;i . CAPITOL ' "HAJJI BABA," with John Dter ek and Elaine Stewart "A DVINTURES Or ROBINSOM CRUSOE1' ! ' . j " GRAND "THE HIGH AND MIGHTY." with John Wayne - and Claire Trevor . (I i I "BELLS OF ROSARTTA" with Roy Rogers and Gabby Hayea HOLLYWOOD ' "KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE." Robert Taylor and Ava Gardner "CRIME WAVE." Gene Nelson and Sterling: Hayden , j Police Of ficei Reported Hiu-t At Silverton States ma a News Serrita SILVERTON Two loggers were jailed it here Monday sight following a; disturbance on a downtown street in which a city policeman reportedly was injured. Lodged in the Silverton jail on charges of disorderly conduct and resisting an j officer was Vance Hitt, 39, Silverton. -Also jailed on a charge of being intoxicated on a public street was Jacob E, Mc Kamey, 48, Turner. ' Hurt in the altercation in the 200 block of Main Street was of ficer Merle Bethscheider. He suf fered a cut ear that required two stitches. .. j . v!r j-'1 Bethscheider had McKamey un der arrest when a second: man struck the officer from behind, said police, j) j Bail on Hitt was set at! $700 and bail for ; McKamey at $35. I McKamey will appear in muni cipal court here Tuesday, fwhile Hitt will be arraigned in the same I court Friday; police said, f Ends Tonte John Wayne in 'The High and Tka Milfv t IKlr . BIG BIT " - -'' m Tr -jse 1 (D)IH1 Here's a filter cigarette real smokers . can enjoy! Winston brings real favor,, back to filter smoking ! ' j ! You're sure to enjoy Winston's full, ' rich tobacco flavor because years were spent getting the exact blend of higher quality tobaccos. YouTl appreciate the by the makers of CAMELS ... no wonder they, taste Directors of Salem C of C Announced Directors of the Salem Cham ber of Commerce for 1955 were announced Monday night follow ing a tally of votes from some 800 chamber members." 1 j Besides the 15 directors elected oy tne entire membership, 10 others will be chosen by business district associations , in various sections of Salem. The entire board then will elect officers. I ' The new directors and the di visions they will lead are agricul tural division, Eddie Ahrens; au tomotive, Otto Wilson; education:, Carl Ascbenbrenner; financial, El ton Thompson. : 7 j Food processing, George Pau lus; hotels, motels and restau rants, Del Milne; insurance, Ken neth Potts; manufacturing, Clau de Miller. . ' ' :. - j. Professional, Dr. Vera Miller; real estate and building, Lee Ob mart; state government, Edwin Armstrong, f - ! I j Utilities and transportation, Jos eph A. H. Dodd; three directors at large, Bernard Mainwaring, Hattie Bratzel and Bruce Wil liams.' -,: . " - . . j The voting was conducted from Nov. 6 to 15. There was a ballot box at the chamber's headquar ters in the Marion County Court house and balloting was also done by maiL : . . . ( Three were nominated for each division's i leadership oy a nomi nating committee. Members voted for then- preference. ARRAIGNMENT CONTINUED HILLSBOHO The arraigni ment of . Jerry Eugene Dodele, 16, accused of the gunshot slaying of Peter Bibbers at Timber. 1 a s t Thursday, ,was continued in dis trict court here Monday. j TWO ACTION PACKED TECHNICOLOR HITS 'V w v 11 CCA REED r9Vf CftCTT 7 si H 41 V ...a filter agarette to filter time spent in perfecting Winston's finer filter to bring you a filter that works beautifully, yet doesn't "thin" the taste or flatten the flavors King-size Winstons draw smoothly, with no effort to puff. It's much more Try 'em today ". i Train Strikes CarvNone Hurt SUtcsaaaa News Berries DALLAS Clinton Ross Foster of Dallas, escaped injury Monday evening in a collision between his car and a freight train at the Southern Pacific crossing on the Dallas-Monmouth highway. State police said Foster was alone in his car when the acci dent occurred about 9:30 p.m. The car had; to be towed away from the scene.. . 1 ; FRANKIE SAYS: i "Home-coming," you KNOW these words mean a "bang up" time for everyone. The students of Willamette proved that in the celebration of their 33rd annual Home-coming. And you folks can be assured of a "bang-op" home-coming if, someone of these nites you would take home a supply of our delicious eiant Smorca- burgers broiled. beef, hot off the broiler, with all the trim mings. Wow! You try them for T.V. snacks, f parties or quick suppers. We're open till 11 p.m. you know. ' In the Candalaria District Adjacent to the Dairy Qneea South ob 99 STARTS TODAY! mm mmm mwmrn fun to smoke Winstons! -you'll see! i . i - so good! V :.wt 1 w,x fur - - y smoking -. i.i