Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, August 21, 1948, Image 1

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    CITY EDITION
CITY EDITION
.LAJJE COUNT.". HOME WEWSPAPEH
airs. N". 234 F.nnn'Mir"" npnwcTTTrnri a v AtimioT "oiTn7o
Mirclor,, "P;' I
emlin Talks
.lS II-J
MMdiieu
Ruhr Tangle
em Differences
Be Responsible
Western
May
(U.PJ The Kremlin
nn Germany have
3,no - ,mnn,.al.v
snag
. n. thiPB Western
A" a nmteH front
I , o..cc an ciemanu, ii wao
.iking was KHCUUK.U .w. ...
and a meeuns
fm Minister V. M. ivioiotuv
. . ..i.if,.i lonHintf tn hf-
Iftjtlhe wesu.ni .
-creed to sees .." ...nu..-
,, iking 'Of "
irence-
-b carried out a series of in
consultations with British
or Frank Roberts and French
.ador Yves Chataigneau
midnight.
Hay's reports said Smith ana
tris conterrea i ii6hi
ihen drove to tne r rencn em
.hMinsult with Chataigneau.
- ihw returned lor additional
,rAmerican conferences.
ut-l'p Hlntea
Russian-controlled Radio Ber-
!!id the negotiations on uei-
twere about to break up. me
it controlled ADN news
it said the Western powers
'not reach agreement on So-
frminds for a voice in tne
m was nothing here to ln
j what might be the stum
i block to agreement among
felern powers, but it was
ird that France might not
falling in line with the post
taken by the united states
Britain.
urn Valuable
ii western envoys were said
convinced that the extraord-
secrecy surrounding the
:! of talks with Molotov is
:j dividends in ability to
plainly and bluntly without
taution necessary in public
itt.
Sabotage Hinted
In Farm Blazes
MACOMB, Ill.(UP)-The U. S. Air Force sent its scien
sxr oui what is raising the
Lewis C. Gust, chief technician at Wright Field O said
the scientists would try to check whether radio waves or
it'l r,he,fr the "?ou. fires whTch have
burned down the farmhouse and two barns.
out wuiey wasn't much in
terested. He packed his be
longings and fled after his
second barn burned down
Friday.
The 67-year-old farmer and his
family couldn't keep up with the
tiny fires, which first appeared as
brown spots on the wallpaper,
then burst into flame. His farm
house and two barns have humeri
down within the last two weeks.
uust intimated that the scien
tists would check whether some
one was trying out a new form of
sabotage. In an interview with the
Chicago Sun-Times, Gust said:
"Suppose you had material that
could be ignited by radio and you
wanted to test it for sabotage value,
wouldn't you pick some out-of-the-way
place, like the Willey
farm, to make the test?"
ladio or Radar
He said scientists believe that
powerful high frequency or ex
tremely short radio waves could
touch off fires. For example, radar
waves set off photographic flash
bulbs in planes in flight.
A Chicago scientist agreed that
radioactivity or radio waves might
cause "such disturbances" but said
it was "highly unlikely" because
there had been no other reaction
in the area.
'Hokum' Charged
Another physicist said the whole
idea was a lot of "hokum," and he
didn't think "even solar disturb
ances" could produce the fires.
Most of Willey's neighbors were
convinced the sun or its heat had
something to do with the fires.
They pointed out that the blazes
occurred on days when the sun
shone brightly.
'Hen Killed
Crash
MD CITY, S. D. (U,R) Air
officers Saturday Investi
ng crash of a B-29 which
-tea into the ground on a
off and killed its 17 crew
:srs and passengers.
( huge ship crashed and
-!J 500 yards from the end of
rjnway Friday at the start of
: . . -
rm training flight.
of the victims, mostly
!9 crewmen, were barilv
N. Medical officers found it
fl to identify them.
Msais withheld names until
ffl-Kin are not fieri.
fat. Tom Segler, public rela
F'Kicer, said the plane diDDeri
lit wing as it raced along the
uyer' ana then
?! to the ground.
P ship flinneri nvor nn tie
Men it hit the grou.id and
miu names.
Lawrence Tie! a form
F? who saw the crash, said a
P7'S ten from the plane's
rjwscue teams said a flamins
"Probably dronneri nff
. ' '
' Herald
wrefc Council
,! Of at least (, w...
r e opening of
" Council nf Churchp. in
m, Hollanri
: two-week mr. ...;
19ndi u "wciito will
oy representatives of
-jnir; ?enminations from
entries. II h- i
l-;tej , - termed
...uijl i e r,,..nl I .
IMhft n , lcolwi event
k A.r8,ant "evolution."
ilches. Planning to ring
a'0 and the na"
834 Monroe St. and the
W BSrl SL " Brad"
Injunction Bars
East Coast Dock
Workers Strike
NEW YORK m The fed
eral government Saturday obtain
ed a temporary injunction barring
a strike of 45,000 East Coast dock
workers set for midnight Satur
day.
federal judge Harold R. Me
dina issued the injunction against
the AFL International Longshore
men's Assn. It will be effective
until Aug. 31.
The injunction was reauesteri
by the Justice Department on the
order of President Truman who
said a strike would "imDeril the
national health and safety."
Board Finding
The President acted after a
presidential fact finding board
said a walkout was "imminent" by
the stevedores currently engaged
in a wage dispute with the New
York Shipping Assn., which rep
resents employers.
Joseph M. Friedman, special as
sistant to U. S. Attorney General
Tom Clark, said that on Aue. 24
the government would ask Judge
meenna to expand the temporary
restraining order into an 80-day
cooling off" injunction as pro.
vided in the Taft-Hartley Act.
THIS BLONDE Is "Queen of
Queens" to Pic Magazine, She's
Jo Ann Amorde, University of
Oregon student and Miss Ore
gon of 1947. The magazine's all
male jury picked her as tops
among the college queens of
everything from A to Z over the
past year. Miss Amorde, 21, is
an education major who taught
at Sutherlin before coming to
the university. She's featured
In an article in the September
issue of the magazine. She was
Daily Emerald "cover girl" on
the campus last spring.
Old Locomobile
Loses Battle
WILLAMINA (U.R) A 1801 Lo
comobile and a 1940 International
log truck tangled three miles west
of here Friday night and, as
could be expected, the log truck
won.
Ralph Jacob Wortman, McMinn
vill, was steering his 47-year-old
steam driven locomobile which
was being towed by a car driven
by his wife.
He was attempting to retrace
the route from McMinnville to
Tillamook when the steamer de
veloped boiler trouble.
His wife pulled her car to the
side of the road to let faster traf
fice by when the towline jerked
and hurled the Locomobile into
the path of the truck driven by
iuictu u. nagar, irraua nonae. ' - .
Wortman was not injured, police I Cimac nMvin
i said. He plans to rebuild the oldlww' wlllw
car.
Bussians Attack
2 German Police
GerL(AP)TRussian' soWiers stabbed and beat two
nrZ lClTr frm the AmeHcan Sector f BM s7
7nty,, 1 Germans resisted abduction into the Soviet
Zone, western sector police announced.
Ine announcement said Russians carried the two fir
mans bodily into the Soviet Sector. The two p ain clothes"
men were stopped near the sector border by numerous Rus"
thev ri 7 t0 g a?0SS the announcemenuaid When
be LntfKed' o-Z?iitabbed and the oK
""C uuu,
While American authorities ! J t ri . ,
vdnttoca Strs Meat Boycott
i.n-c lunn oi me eastern
and Western Sectors, still an-i
oiner Kidnaping incident was
auriDuted to the Russians
nriusn aUtnor t M annn,,nnJ
that armed Russians abducted two
German policemen from their sec
tor. They demanded the return of
me men.
Third Abduction
ine latest abduction was the
third carried out by the Russians
in two days. American officials
nave aemanaea tormally the re
lease of three German policemen
from their sector who wpr
by the Russians during a black
mantel raia iriday on the American-Russian
sector border. The
Americans said the Russians made
no reply.
One of the British Sector police
seized Saturday later escaped. In
all, three of nine western sector
police seized in the clashes have
managed to flee their captors, who
maintain a rival police headquart
ers in the Soviet sector.
Truce Hoped
The Americans announced they
will seek face-to-face talks with
the Russians to try for a truce in
conflict involving Berlin's divided
police force. The Russians have
served notice they will continue
their raids in downtown Berlin,
""S" usiensioiy to catch h art
mm icteers.
The Americans said there is
growing danger the clashes mav
s'uw inio serious international
incidents.. The Soviet-backed po
nce uniei, l-aui Markeraf alreari
has made it clear he will recoe-
iii: no sector Dounaaries in Ber.
lin.
the
In Third Week
By United Press
Housewives throughout.
country vowed Saturday to con
tinue their organized price strikes
into a third week to prevent the
meat industry from passing new
price boosts on to them.
The drive to force nrices rinwn
or at least hold the line was re
ported to Be dying out, however,
ni i-nnaaeipnia and in Tulsa.
cut elsewhere the clamor for
price relief was unabated.
The chairman of the League of
Women shoppers at Minnpannlic
we are ngming to the fin
ish. Denver price strike leaders
said they would ask women to re
move meat from their menus three
days each week "until prices re
turn to OPA levels."
Los Angeles women said thev
wujtuu more man ever '
in view of high livestock prices
which threaten to push the retail
prices even higher.
Much-Sought
Witness May
Give Testimony
House Committee
Prepares Subpoena
WASHINGTON W The
House Un-American Activities
Committee Saturday drew up a
subpoena for J. Peters, described
in testimony as a one-time head of
the Communist underground in
this country.
But there was no assurance that
the mysterious, much-sought wit
ness would talk even if committee
agents find him and if he is prom
ised immunity from deportation
which immigration authorities are
threatening him with.
Awaited Decision
Peters was arrested last October
and released under $5,000 bond to
await a decision on whether he
should be deported as a member of
an organization advocating forcible
overthrow of the government.
Some time in the next ten days
the committee hopes to be able to
subpoena Peters during the de
portation hearing promised by
Watson Miller, commissioner of
immigration.
Subpoena Question
Miller informed the committee
Friday he cannot legally produce
Peters for a congressional hearing.
But Rep. Nixon (R-Calif.) said
Miller agreed to notify the com
mittee of the time and place of
the "early" hearing in the depor
tation case. At that time, Nixon
said, the committee subpoena can
be served.
Whittaker Chambers, self
avowed former Communist and
now a Time Magazine senior edi
tor, has named Peters as the man
who headed the Communist .un
derground movement in this coun
try prior to 1937.
Verify Testimony
Through questioning of Peters
the committee hopes to verify
some of the testimony it has re
ceived from Chambers inplicating
many former federal officials.
Committee members conceded
that Peters, like many other per
sons named by Chambers, may re
fuse to talk. But they speculated
that, he might be willing to name
names in exchange for immunity
from deportation.
Favors
South
New Amendment
WASHINGTON (ff) South
ern Democratic support appeared
Saturday for a move by Senator
Lodge (R-Mass) to put. presiden
tial elections on a popular vote
basis.
Senators Sparkman (D-Ala)
and Olin D. Johnston (D-SC) told
a reporter in separate interviews
they will back in the next session
of Congress a proposal to change
the present system by which a
state's entire Electoral College
vote is cast for the candidate who
tops the popular ballot test.
Lodge offered in the last ses
sion and intends to revive a pro
posed constitutional amendment
under which each candidate
would share in the electoral vote
on the percentage of his election
day total.
Thus an aspirant who lost out
by only a few popular votes to
his presidential opponent would
get nearly half of the state's sup
port in the electoral college, in
stead of none at all.
Sparkman said he thinks South
ern Democrats generally will sup
port the proposal because it
would "go a long way toward do
ing away with minority rule in
this country." . v
"There are some minorities in
northern states who get just about
anything the want out of the po
litical parties because the parties
fear they may have the balance of
power in a state with a lot of
electoral votes," the Alabama sen
ator said.
He added that he believed a
SEN. HENRY CABOT LODGE
Jr., has won support for his
proposal to elect the President
by popular vote. Southern Demo
crats say they would back such
a move.
change such as suggested by Lodge
"would have a good effect in the
South."
"It would encourage both
parties to campaign in the South,
because if the Republicans could
cut into the electoral vote there
which they can't do now the
Democrats would be campaigning
to keep them from it."
'Axis Sally'
r ...
.' "father Bur-a,,
tnd I vicinity, partly coudy
LL?'hl: same Sunday
WCSS in morning. Li -KUle
Chan Western
' Win i . n occasional
nieh . x"etne, "rth Sat-
t'-TWthfi unoay mostly
i "h ,ew showers in north
K SUs,iK!
: 'rida'
Highest tern-
'S tnriin. i - ' u raln m
;'th r,g,10:u30 m.: total
i j, '"';h' stage of river at
.v- South 6: prevaiiino
Sunset (PDT):
w- and 8:06 p. m.
m- and 8:04 p m.
I'IM..
I.," InH
r.?':23,
5iv 'u3
'iLS '-in
,.u.i ,
dr.
t:ou p.
'S II.
Theme Ballad
Poor Defense:
He Got Fence
SPRINGFIELD "Don't fence
me in," sang a happy, though
liquefied, logger Saturday at
2 a.m., as he climbed into the
car he had flagged on 21st St.
"Don't fence me in," he sang
as they rolled through dark
streets toward his hotel.
"Don't fence me in," he la
mented, as they pulled over to
the curb.
"My God, don't," he said as
the policeman he had mistaken
for a cab driver "registered" him
for the night in the city jail on
a drunk charge.
WASHINGTON W) U. S.
marshals waited for Mildred Eliz
abeth Gillars to land from a trans
Atlantic plane Saturday to greet
her first return home in 19 years
with a treason warrant.
Miss Gillars better known to
GI's as "Axis Sally" is being
brought back from Frankfurt,
Germany to face a federal grand
jury here on charges she betrayed
her native land by wartime broad
casts over Radio Berlin.
The 48-year-old native of Port
land, Me., was located two years
ago by American authorities in
Berlin, living a precarious exis
tence in the bombed-out German
capital.
She was arrested, but subse
quently released to the American
Occupation Zone on condition that
she report every two weeks to U.
S. Army authorities.
Growers Short
Of Bean Pickers
Bean harvesters Saturday
morning greeted near empty
truckloads of pickers with wor
ried faces as they looked forward
to the mounting harvest with
snnnking crews.
IIT.'IU , . ...
mui oaiuruay admittedly a
Bad day, Farm Labor Represen
tatives Joe .Grannan said, "The
problem is not keeDine workers
out during the week. It lies in
gaining that extra 200 pickers we
need to handle the record 1948
narvest."
Top pay scales have drawn
nearly a thousand full time pick
ers to tne fields, but, until the
end ot the month "we will need
a minimum of 1200", Grannan
said.
Volunteers can report to the
Oregon State Employment Serv
ice at 6:45 a. m. Monday ready to
go.
Hill Will Open Utah
Coeducational Academy
PORTLAND (UP) Plans to
Morse. Youna
a
See Collection
Among early visitors to the Ivan
Collins collection ot historical
vehicles in miniature Saturday
afternoon were Sen. and Mrs.
Wayne L. Morse, who drove up
u.b iviL-nenzie witn mends to see "Pen a co-educational military
the benefit showing for the John academy at Brigham City, Utah,
Phetteplace Memorial school. (were unfolded Saturday by Jo
Also eager to be one of the early , sePn A- H'". superintendent of
guests was Cal Young, pioneer !,ne Portland Hill Military Aca
resident of Lane County who hasidemy-
followed Collins' work with in-1 Hi" announced the project
terest for some time. iltter tlle War Assets Adminislra-
The collection of horse-drawn I tion rePrtcd he bid on the sale
vehicles in miniature, valued at Bus"nell General Hospital at
more than S100.000. i hin Brgnam City.
shown for the first time in its' PlrIsat.the academy would re
entirity and without ni-nri. Ji lceive 5!alnl similar to that
and Mrs. Collins. The collection
nas neen noted by such publica
nuns as iue Magazine,
given Wave and Marine Corps
Women's Reserve, Hill said.
The new school would be a
Sunrinv h, f. iu. i ui ttnun oi nit foriiana lnstitu-
10 am i.T I Z- r y are!tlon DUt h called his project
iu a.m. to 5 p.m. Visitors mavif-ih i. .
rparh Iho mil v. i , "cuuiuuo uiougn 11 is a
1 11 n , h,m by driv-l"foautiful site, beautiful location
!.. east oI Euee"e on land beautiful climate."
the McKenzie Highway. The house !
at me ngnt of the road, and a
wheel and anvil have been set in
the crescent drivewav. A sion
will be posted in plain sight.
Lonins lias spent 12 years work.
ing on the collection, the only one
Reports Reveal
Russian Agents
Tombing' 1) S
WASHINGTON (U.B Re.
ports from all over the country
Saturday underscored Army warn
mgs that Russian intelligence
agents are combing th United
States for data essential to strate
gic military planning.--
A United Press survey of cham.
bers of commerce and business,
men disclosed that suspect in.
quiries have been pouring in from
overseas to industrial centers
which would be prime tareets in
event ot war.
FBI Told
Many of the communications
suspicious enough to warrant
turning them over to the FBI or
military intelligence. And one
chamber of commerce official said
supplying the information sought
would Be "like pin-pointing im
portant targets to the Russians."
A number of others, however,
regarded the inquiries received as
entirely innocuous.
Ask Caution
Army Intelligence asked the
Commerce Dept., and business
men throughout the country to he
wary of information requests from
overseas, no mater how harmless
they seem. It did so after Wm.
ing that inquiries of seemingly in
nocent origin, but following a set
MHuern. nad Been sent to more
than 80 chambers of commerce
and to several score Industrial
concerns.
The bulk of these oiierlps avk
for maps, information about fpr-
rain and transportation, telephone!
communications data, and indus
trial facts of many kinds. Such in-
loimation, the Army says, could
find its way into "order of battle"
plans for strategic bombing, sabo
tage, or invasion.
Soviet Agents
Ihe inquiries for the most part
come from what the Army calls
thinly-disguised Soviet intelligence
agents in Kiissian satellite nations
and Soviet Germany.
Many, however, come from
friendly countries and may or may
not be legitimate. Several queries
were sent to North and South
Dakota which, it was pointed out,
lie on potential bomber routes
from across the Arctic.
Bride Learns
Joy of Cooking
PORTLAND (U.R) A 20-
year-old bride was recovering
from leg burns at a hospital Satur
day.
Portland police said Mrs. Ruth
Menashe was injured when a pot
of grease spilled in her new kit
chen. Her husband said it was her
first attempt at a home cooked
meal.
Margaret Rose
WAGE OFFEJt REJECTED
TACOMA IIP) The execu
tive board of the Retail Clerks
Union, Local 367. Friday night re
jecled an employers' wage con
tract proposal offering department
and specialty store clerks an in-1 wage increase. The
crease of S2.50 a week for women Walked out Friday.
and $3 for men. No further meet-1 Employes in eight of
ings have been scheduled. Thell.-rgest butcher shoos
strike, which hr,5 ciofed 10 stores, Thtirraay morning bi't
here, will tnter its third week ences had been ironed
m. i.i ft) Monday. 6:30 p. m.
of its kind in the country.
Public Style Show Planned
As Chinchilla Meet Closes
Atomic Strikers Faced
With Loss of Jobs
LOS ALAMOS, N. M. (U.R)
Workers at the Los Alamos atomic
bomb project were faced Saturday
with either returning to thp enn-
struction jobs they walked off of 'signers and
Top-bracket chinchilla growers
from all over the nation and
Canada 400 strong prepared
Saturday night to close their
three-day convention with a fur
style show at Blue River High
School. .
Willard George, famous Los
Angeles furrier and known as one
of the nation s most prominent de.
Wednesday or bavin, the W 3'" .."'. e" m uleischaa.?: E1 Mon Calif., president
u.. .i w " i '"uuoJ win aiiuw
Salem Meatcutters
Back After Strike
SALEM lTP Str.Vino
. --- - .-- . fl , ,, ,- wow wiiii iur irim Wl
meatcutters went back on the job i ,r'rms at ,ne atomic city announced shown from a Eugene store
, Saturday after employers motllhey would recruit other workers, Fur farmers discussing the
then demands for a $o weekly i unless the striking AFL laborers eress onrf nr..hi.m. r .ui.
at the current market price for
chinchillas, the inn manager said.
The public style show at 8
p.m. Saturday will close the
convention, but some of the
delegates plan to remain on the
McKenzie for a few days for
fishing.
Some of the prominent growers
attending the convention are Vern
BALMORAL, Scotland (U.R)
Princess Margaret Rose came of
age Saturday a little discontent
ed because her parents forbade
her a big 18th birthday party, but
otherwise happy.
Now she can have a house of
her own, a lady-in-waitine and a
good deal more freedom from the
parental restraints which she hasl
found a bit irksome at times. She
also received today a legacy of
$1UU,UUU.
The incident of the party was
not really too distressing either.
It was agreed that the big event
will be held in the middle of next
week, because of the row raised
by British churches when Princess
Elizabeth, Margaret's older sister,
danced after midnight into Sun
day during her trip to Paris a
few months ago.
But Margaret Rose will have a
smaller informal party at the
royal residence here Saturday
night, and all the guardsmen and
others who dance attendance upon
her will be there, including the
eligible Marquess of Blandford,
22, whom gossip has said is No. 1
on her list.
New City
To Act Old
Soviet Consul
Expected to Sail
Within Week
Reds Say U S Request
Not Cause of Leaving
WASHINGTON (P) Soviet
Consul General Jacob M. Lomakin
is expected by officials here to
comply next Saturday with this
country's expulsion order against
him.
Reports from Stockholm and
New York offices of the Swedish
Amei'icun line are that a reserva
tion had been made in the Liner
Stockholm leaving next Saturday
in the name of the Soviet official
and his wife and child.
Before Order
In New York, Vice-Consul Zot
I. Cherpunykh said he had under
stood two months ago that Loma
kin would go home about this
time. Such prompt news of the
reservations indicated that they
had been made before the State
Department issued its expulsion
order Friday and possibly even
before the affair of the refuee
school teachers arose.
It remained to be seen what of
ficial action the Soviet govern
ment would take directly as a re
sult of the State Department's
note rejecting all Russian charges
against American conduct in con
nection with the school teachers
and announcing that Lomakin's
credentials were being cancelled.
Must Leave
Faced with formal U. S. charges
that Lomakin "abused" his of
ficial position by his role in the
Kasenkina case, the Soviets have
no choice but to remove him from
his New York po;t.
But they may accompany the
action with a fresh blast against
the American stand in the rtYges
teacher dispute.
Possible Actions
Speculation in official ouartem
also takes into consideration two
other possible Russian moves:
1. The Soviets may take soma
retaliatory measure as they usu
ally do in such instances by ac
cusing an American official in th
Soviet Union of improper conduct
and ordering him out of that
country.
2. They may reject the Stats
Department's request for two let
ters Mrs. Oksana S. Kasenkina
wrote before her spectacular leap
from the Coviet consulate in New
York. The letters reportedly ex
plain her decision to remain in
this country and possibly may
throw further light on her treat
ment at Lomakin's hands, i
RICHLAND, Wash. M) The
Northwest's youngest boom city is
going to noio us own "pioneer
ueiuuiauon and to Keep pace
with the times it will be called the
Atomic Frontier Days."
Naturally, the city is Richland,
which mushroomed during the
war to produce material for the
atomic bomb.
Dales for the big blowoff are
aept. 2 and 4, and the theme will
oe entirely western, reports the
sponsoring Richland Junior Cham
ber of Commerce. There will be
oio tasnioned dancing, a barbecue,
kangaroo courts; Richlanders will
dress in western garb and a queen
will be chosen.
Control to Stay
. BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (PI
The Danube River Central
Europe's one outlet to the sea
will remain under Soviet control
regardless of the fate -of the new
Russian-dictated Danube Pact.
(The western powers refused to
sign .the pact which was Initialed
in Belgrade this week by Russia
and her satellites).
This control is virtually the
same as that enjoyed by the Rus
sians since the end of the war.
Western delegates to the Danube
Conference pointed out that under
the new pact no shipper of any
nationality could traverse the en
tire navigable part of the river
from Central Germany to the .
Black Sea without Russian ap
proval. And it was made clear by
Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister
Andrei Vishinsky at the meeting
that western "economic penetra
tion" is not wanted.
ACCESS ROAD
PORTLAND (m Thi. Pnh.
lie Roads Administration will open
bids Sept 8 on constructing the
Portland Creek bridge 40 miles
east of Eugene. The bridge will
provide access to forest service
timber for movement to lumber
mills in the Eugene area.
Three to Face
Rape Inquiry
Three local youths, Glenn Lee
Bryan, 19, Fcrrall Curtis Parsons,
19, and Marlin Raymond Hurst,
17, were bound over to the grand
jury on charges of statutory rape
following a preliminary hearing in
district court Friday.
The three youths, with eight
others, were charged with being
involved in the assault of a 15-year-old
girl last July.
Ray Gould, 20. charged with
contributing to the delinquency
of a minor, was released after th
Friday hearings because of In
sufficient evidence.
Judge Chester N. Anderson said
preliminary hearings for the other
seven youths will be at a later
date.
Japanese Epidemic
Spreads to Horses
PACKARD HOLDS LINE
NEW YORK (P) The Park-
several' and RirlmrH r:-, ci t ' ard Motor Car C.n . Hnos nni r,in
nnctl,, f.,-.. tr..- i- - oaii, ijanei. . .. ' . """
Officials of two contractus ninth mTJil' ...u i.i 7. -i, u-1 V, . , secl'etary-manager of the! " J?','1. Pr's ,mmed-
-T; . " " i i' u L in N 8 in mrnil fl Rrwrinre " " ".it-rtfcr. ill sie'l
Assn. prices and higher freight costs.
... ... ... UCOrBe T . Thr klnnhar n...MA..l '
iviucneii, Berkeley,' Vr-.A.. " "" """""""' horses throuehmit .I-. ,itu
speaker,! . estimated 50 per cent of them dv-
zrz tv ehi
silence nn th. i.niiirn.in.,..i. - ' .... .. .. - - i'"1" '"8 eany years of.miii. t 0...1 . .
out by quest made b.v the Zh, and M .i.v.: i v".,.Z'"tV " "'p 'j0g Ya0 n ry research in Chile. Ithe Ci v r , . '"aa-lu- City
- ,,, oiune iconveniion nran- Th,a. .. ... . . .......... mc ivuiimKur v. i. fnpnni hn -a
L-OnKlril-tlnn .nmr.ni- ' , . ' ....c Lunelle KITIS Wll mMD ..... i 1 1 r .. . .c
--"i"""". ouanersi an "worth 16.000.oon" i-m.i. - .-.,: w,s uuroaucea ay wra- signed nis
- - 1....081VHB1 iicu u. rcwisuu.
$5 weekly
meatcutters
Salem's
struck
diffnr-
ilU AFI. lahnr ' .. I " J, " . .. . . """ r.
came back to work. About 3500 dustry at th I ir , ,,,rh '' "" , '"' -Was a ,PrinciPal speaker,
construction and maintenance! Z Lt .,":l?.u1,ln. resul!s ' hi. 25 years
TOKYO (Pi Horse racing
in Japan may bo suspended until
the sleeping sickness epidemic is
over.
Hie disease has struck 1238
ing.
MLK ORDINANCE UP
PORTLAND (P) An ordin
ance prohibiting the sale of raw CITY MANAGER QUITS
Gn ANTS PASS (UP).
signed his nnst. Mivnr itr.tr..
wuDanK announced Saturday.