:.d c. rvsz (Yt. 8 iTOn quiet. -r: . i s ret in free West ! . i Lvps i man wno strikes , ar in', ft the hearts of East Ger r ary's Communist mien thm.ih labile, complicated weap ons. He is Tr, Gheo Friedenau. lawver, and his weapons consist of law and kfal Justice. FrWcnau operates through U Lear;e of Free Jurists, which he founded and beads. It Is one of the world's most original and re spected anti Commuriist trodr ground movement!. It has the backing both moral and finan cialof Influential Jurist! through out the free world. Headquartered In West Berlin, the organization works this way: Volunteer informants through out tasi uermany uic icouc advised on the doings of Comma Bist officials. Whenever one of the officials does somethinf. that could be considered a crime against hu manity or Justice, It is recorded in the files of the Free Jurists. The aim Is to gather enough evi dence to these officials could be convicted on criminal charges, should they ever fall into Western band. .- ' Klpnaa Attempt! ,: .., " . The organization has become so tftective that the Communists have twice attempted to kidnap Friedenau. They failed, but In 1952 they did succeed In kidnaping Dr. Walter Linse, head of the Free Jurist! economic division. , Linse wai slugged in front of kis home, dragged into a waiting himk;Ii mnA Mm Into East Germany. Although both the Rus sians and the East uermans nave denied knowing anything about linse. returning prisoner! have reoorted seelM him in Soviet slave labor camps. ! Ever since the Linse kidnaping, friedenau has lived a careful life. Kis home telephone number ii un listed. He ileepi within reach of pistol and a police alarm but ton. An armed guard keeps a con stand vigil in front of his heme, fehirh standi less than a mile from East German territory. ', Friedenau drives to bis office In car equipped with a two-way radio and an armed chauffeur. Once in the office, which is in a West Berlin suburb near hi borne be lit! at a desk that contains not only a pistol but another po lice alarm button, t niler Teoalea - - , ; Interviewed In his office, the 44-year-old Friedenau shrugged and imiled when asked If living under tension doesn't make hira ner vous. ? "Not necessarily," be replied. You get used to it What makei me nervous 1s the responsibility for the people who areworking with me." ' . ' - -; ! But he dislikes talking about the dangerous aspects of his Job. He would rather explain how and why the Free Jurist! wai organized in '. 1949. j "I think I got the first ideal for my present Job in prison," he lays. "The Nazi! put me there after the July 20 (19441 attempt en Hitler's life. I had nothing to do with this plot, but I did know lome of the people Involved. "While in prison, I teamed that the guards and higher officials could be influenced if you" forgot about politics and talked to them about legal Justice , and legal tihti.". ; j v : : v - Cathen Evidence J ' Friedenau believes East Ger man Communist official! can be influenced the lame way. There for hii organization concentrate! on gathering every available bit of criminal evidence that couia De used against the officials. When enough 'evidence has ac cumulated, a formal Kgai lnma tnont ii drawn im by Friedenau and his aidea. The indictment goes into the files of the Free Jur ats and in West German law en forcement agenciei, and ii also ictrihiitH In fi t Cormanv. with at least one copy going directly to the person indicted Russia Offers To Donatc?v ii-iuatcnais 5 , i WASHINGTON; Oct. I -Ros- I. tnM h ITnitMl KtM if about 110 pounds of fissionable material! to an international atoms-for-peace pool as soon aa such a pool can be set up. 1 This figure was used in a Soviet note of July IS, 1955, The note was released tonight in Wn&hingtuQ and Moscow along with others dealing with American. Soviet atomic negotiations. ' , President Eisenhower early this year set asid 20.000 kilograms of fissionable materials for interna tional distribution, including a po tential contribution to the ; pro poser" new atoms-for-peace agen cy, as well as 20,000 kilograms for domestic nonmilitary use. - ' U.S. officials said the 50 kilo ram offer of the Russians wai merely a token contribution and is much less than would be needed to run even one power reactor. I'.J f:r f ! ! .a. B lrCkuJIJ I 1 CHAN an LAM : z NATUiOPATUS I, iZl Com fit i n nifi1y Duly Ilia I ? i ; t to I f m f "unlutloi J l r Mrt ftftd Bfint trU tr t PfSf-nrpd llnf I 1 tut ftr-liv lift Ki C:?., f.:r... Oct. 7, 'Z3 hrlhi Underground Uses Law as Its "This maVes them very ner- vous," Friedenau reports. "In fact, some of them become so worried that they send relatives LANCASTER, Pa., Oct Little elght months-old Carlyn Sempler, is held I Great Dane dog. Rip. And Rip shows he's here by her proud mother, Evelyn Ay Sempier, who was Miss America j logs. The former Miss America is staying near here with her parents while f 1954, as the baby shows she's fond and unafraid of the Sempier's huge husband Carl is doing a Navy stint (AP Wlrephoto) GoVoLee to Become Candidate SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 7 -Utah Secretary of State Lamont Toronto said today Gov. J. Brack en Lee will be listed on the gen eral election ballot in November as a candidate for re-election. PRE 1 VTHIMlb)D 4 Same goes for toutoflOpre-'SI , Fords, Plymouth, Kashs, Studebsken, DodiuandHudaons. t or friends to us to plead that they really aren't such terrible persons. Sometimes the indictments help bring about a change in Commu- Ex-Miss America's Little Girl Not Afraid of Big, Bold Dog , 'V Toronto said his office had ac cepted a petition nominating Lee, who was defeated for the Repub lican nomination by George D. Clyde in the Utah primary Sept. II. Lee is nearlng the end of his second four-year term. - 1955 CHEVYS PERK UP Mobilgas nist policy." I So far, the Free Jurists have drawn up indictments against 300 East Germans. But there are r- ' j for Re-Election Despite Primary Defeat State law provides that a candi date may have his name placed on the ballot by presentation of a petition bearing at least 300 signa tures. Toronto said the petition for Lee had about 430 signatures. SURLY CHEVY? An entirely new grade sold at the price of Regular! Mobilgas R does it! This entirely new grade of gasoline that sells at the price of regular gives 8 out of 10 pre-1955 Chevys smooth, knock-free power long mileage. Why? Formula MC4 added to higher octane Mobilgas B helps keep your engine clean and peppy voluminous files on thousands more, and someday, when enough evidence is in, there will be in- dictments against these too. . . .... i . ' ,' . - ' . ' . . ' . ; . r ' Lee, asked if the petition did not officially make him a candidate for re-election, told The Associated Press: "I suppose it does." Asked then if his present inclination were to accept the petition as put ting him back in the race. f Weapon "We list not only their bad acts," Friedenau says, "but also their good ones. And they know this." bored with the whole proceed- he said: "I don't know. I'm going to 'wait a few days, but I'll prob ably make an early decision." A spokesman at Clyde's head quarters said he was sure Clyde had not heard of the petition's being filed. Dulles Urges Just, Peaceful Suez Solution W1LUAMSTOWN, Mass.. CM. I Secretary of State Dulles to day urged a Just and peaceful settlement of the Suez Canal dis pute that would give Egypt no opportunity to "extract tribute" from other countries. One of three Christian leaders t receive honorary degrees as Williams College celebrated the 150th anniversary of the Ameri can missionary movement, Dulles said the Suez Canal "is in an al most literal sense a lifeline" to many nations. The secretary came here from New York where the U.N, Securi ty Council started discussion yes terday of problems arising from Egyptian President Nasser's sei zure of the waterway last July. " No nation," he said should be required to live under an economic sword of Damocles." Dulles suggested no details of a settlement but said there should be "no risk of overt or covert discrimination" in any solution. Of Egypt's seizure he said: - "The Egyptian government took this action under conditions which suggested an intention to exercise this control not in the general in terest but to control the so-called grandeur of Egypt by being able to exert economic pressures upon other countries and to extract tribute from them." Dulles received an honorary honorary degree of doctor of hu mane letters were: Alford Carle ton, executive vice president of the American Board of Commis sioners for Foreign Missions, and Luther R. Fowle, who served as a missionary in Trkey. , liberol DR. SEMLER WILL GIYE YOU ALL THE CREDIT YOU NEED ... for all the dental work you need No red tp, no bank r finance company lo deal with. YOU DECIDE how small your credit eaymenhj should be, and Dr. Semler will accept any reasonable taint you want. Small monthly payments are promptly arranged with sincera, friendly consideration for your own budget. fc i - PRIS GLADLY 0U0TD Irl ADVANCE Tha new Transparant Palate Denturet acclaimed by the Dental Profaniod for thair Natural Appearance and Comfortable Fit are available without delay on Dr. Semler 's Liberal Terms. On approval of your credit, taltt through 1958 to pay, in imaK monthly amounts you can easily afford. NEW PLATES IN ONE DAY , , . if no extraction it needed, come in before 10 a. m. (except Saturday) and your hew denturet will be ready by S p. m. the SAME DAY. NO ADVANCE APPOINTMENT REQUIRED Coma in any timt at your convenience for examineliea or consultation. Your dental wort completed in I to 3 days difficult eases excepted) . . PARTICULARLY CONVENIENT FOR OUT-OF-TOWN RESIDENTS. PARK IN ANY Devon Scores Comcbnc!; In England's Labor Party By TOM OCHILTRtE BLACKPOOL, England, Oct. ( (Jrv-A mere It months ago, the moderate leaders of Britain's La bor party seriously considered ex pelling left-winger Aneurin Bevan for repeated breaches of party discipline. They weighed the atter care fully but retraced from acting. The moment passed. And it prob ably -never will come again. For Bevan. 58.- a firebrand from the mine-scarred valleys of Wales. has scored one of the greatest comebacks in the history of Brit ish politics. ' ,." Ke turned the Labor partv con ference here this past week into a triumphant personal procession. Not only did he establish himself as the party's second most pow erful figure, he even shifted the whole party to the left by making the Bevanite brand of socialism once me respectable in the movement. Creeping I's Now Bevan breathes down the neck of moderate Hugh Gaitskell, 50, the party's new leader. Gait skell seems to be moving leftward himself to keep in stejp. One of these two men undoubt edly will be prime minister when and if Labor wins an elec tion. As one Laborite said: "In a po litical sense, this situation reminds you of the Western film sequence where two men stalk each other through a deserted frontier town. The tension is bound to build up. I'd hate to guess the winner. But oon't count Gaitskell out. As a politician, he is no mug.". No Challenge Seoa In a few weeks, the Labor mem bers of, Parliament caucus to choose their leader and deputy for rid 58innd OF MORE DENTAL CARE Brt,indiotelhotht number p.fn, vi,i.in, their d.n.... .J y.l hot naorly doubled ..nc. 140 V butth.r.or..tillS8wh.n.gl pu, off needed Dentol Co'elorlo 0h.Tak.advon.o9..fOr.S.ml.r. Credit Plon. iilTBL mm liMWiMllltMVKI nri Luu And Staff of togbfeiW Ooiifbls 3 tLtuS! Sl5uvi2fiFit mum mim mmtj H STATE & COMfilERClAW SALEM Wafn.Adolph Btdg. 10? . . Give- ui rh TICKn . . np naving venrai aorvNo Mrtrmel fei the new Parliamentary session. : This usually is routine. The siS ting leader always expects to he'd the Job. Political ob- vers be lieve Bevan will not make his challenge so soon. They think Gaitskell will remain as leader for the time being. , Bevan ma or may not challenge Hueh Griffith! for the deputy leadership. He hai not ruled out any possibilities. Wh"i his itrength in entire Labor movement grows, Bevan still has to swin mere members ! of the lab-'- debra:ioi. , in tlx I'-yr- of C-mmors over to hi! t'ie if he wants ultimately to bead the party. Ike, Nixon Chart Plans WASHINGTON, Oct. 6 -Vice- i President NiNon conferred with ; President Eisenhower today on their election campaign plans. Reporters didn't get a chance to talk to Nixon when he left the White House but James C. Hag erty, Eisenhower's press secre tary, said the President and the Vice-President merely continued . i. j: : -I t A Nixon met with Eisenhower on Thursday to tell him about the 15.000 miles of campaigning he, put in during a IB-day tour throuuh 32 states he had just completed. The V'ice-Preident is spending the weekend resting and preparing for another fast-moving campaign swing that will take him to 14 states in 10 days starting Tuesday. Says! QUICK PLATE REPAIRS Iter $eny tervfet rwikf L . for th. Mrwd yw our Offico IenoNt II 4 441 II il mvaii R INADVANCI W9 ,,-.