. - ; -: ! M ' ' ' - ' I ' Mr - ' . ' - . ' ici i - jyy f?k Jr sss 7Btsisi MAKES SIZZLING MARK The starting flag down at Daytona Beach as thit Chrysler 300 wound up 160 miles at a sizzling average speed of 90.05 miles an hour, to win the grand national stock car championship from 60 speeding cars. The new 1955 Chryslers will be displayed here Fri day night at the Spring opening show by Eddie's Sales and Service. ummmi nig 3V J&tW 1 FlREFLlTE ALL NEW As new as its named is the De Soto Fireflite series, introduced for the first time in 1955. This all-new four door model is lower, longer, roomier and has the most powerful engine built by De Soto. These cars will be displayed at Bend's 1955 Spring open ing show Friday night by Fundingsland Motor Co. Yalta Papers Put Sobering Light on Big Three Talks By LVI.K C. WILSON 1'nltcd Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP) Careful examination of the Yalta papeis puts m a sobering liht the cur rent hullabaloo about a top level big power meeting. The Yalta conference left the United States and I he free nations ill a perilous st for a number of reasons, including the Soviet Rus sian policy of running out on any agreement at any covenient time. But another cause was the fail ure of the late President Roose velt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill to do thcir homework. They went to Yalta unprepared, on the evidence of the written record, and far from agreed on several basic 'issues which they were to discuss. Another Valla? If the United States government is prepared now to send President Kisenhower properly briefed to a meeting with the heads of the So viet and British governments, there is mighty little evidence of it here. Secretary of State Dulles has been busy with other matters, all of them related in one way or an other with the cold war, it is true. That would not be sufficient, however, to establish U.S. -British accord and give great promise to a liig Three or Big Four meeting sxm. Another Y-ilta c-isily could come from such a meeting unless the American president and the British prime minister who sat down with the Russians were well briefed and agreed on what they wanted, how much they would trade to get it and the actual limits of compromise to which they would go- 'T.ond Faith" Musing There was no such undo'-standinT at Yalta. Mr. Roosevelt and Churchill more or less disagreed there on the status ot Asia colonial states, on methods of dealing with n.rr,.ir.iF -iTI, th Iff, Ivl.allini, I'to whack up areas of influence with the Russians in the Balkans, on territorial concessions to get the Russians into the Japanese war, and, finally, on adequate supervis ion of postwar Polish elections. There was little else, in the way of specific problems on which Mr. Roosevelt nnd Churchill could agree or disagree. Generalissimo .losef Stalin often was in a position to play one against the other, and did. Mr. Eisenhower, himself, has made certain stipulations in the past witli respect to any big power meeting, lie has insisted that the Russians give some evidence of j;ood faith acts, not words before he undertakes to negotiate directly with them. There is ample opportunity for Moscow to meet that condition. If there has been any Russian move to meet the President's con ditions, it has not been publicly reported in Washington. Salvation Army Staaes Reviva Mortgage Sale Planned by U.S. I.OS ANGUI.ES (UP) The fed eral government t'xlay put up for sale some mortgages worth S9.0K). (100 covering some 1100 homes in Oregon. Paul Akin, manager of the Dis triet Federal National Mortgage Assx'iation. said the sale was .me step toward taking government out of the mortgage business. He said at least SO.inu homes in nine western states. Hawaii and Alaska were included in the proj ect. The mortices represent ST00, OOn.OOO in total value, he said. Some HO million dollars in mort gages covering S3.0U0 homes wore put up for sale in the state of Washington. CHICAGO (UP) The Salvation Army brought back "that old time religion" Monday night in a foot- stomping "hallelujah" revival modeled after the fervent ISSOs. Eight hundred persons crowded the old Princess Rink to chorus "amen" and "yea, brother" as the Army relived its pioneer days. The old fashioned revival, staged by a cast of 100 Army members, was in commemoration of the evangelistic organization's 75th an niversary in the United States and its 70th year in Chicago. Tiie now - crumbling Princess- Rink on Chicago's West Side once rocked to some of the Army's greatest revival sessions before the turn of the century. The Army left the oid hall in l!oo and the Rink fell upon loose ways. It was used as a dance hall, a roller skating rink and a night club before it was abandoned. But the Army came back and the old rink rocked again. The Army's lads and lassies put on false beards and 1SS5 costumes. A few of the women even painted their faces in order to 'impersonate fallen women. The "big four" of U. S. exports are in.liK'rial machinery, automo biles, grains and cotton. They ac-j count f'.r approximately 40 peri rent of the total value of the goods we sell abroad. TIMK PrsHttO BACK FLINT. Mich. (UP) - Strong winds turned back the hands of time here Tuesday. The winds pushed back the hands of an outdoor clock at a rate of several revolutions per minute. Youngster Says Red Teen-agers Ape Americans1' B-RLIN (UP) A Soviet Air Force utficcr's jazz ldving son who fied to the West said today teen agers in Russia like to imitate Americans. Valery A Lysikov. 17, told a press conference Sqyiet boys and girls are wild about jazz. And like boys anywhere they find girls hard to understand. "Jazz is very popular but it's almost nonexistent; that is, as far as the government radio and stage is concerned. We used to jazz It up ourselves the best way we could," Lysikov said. He said boys and girls in Rus sia like to dress the way they imagine Americans do. "I hear now the big fad in Mos cow is bow ties," he said. "The kids think they are very Ameri can. But of course bow ties are hard to get." Asked how boy meets girl in Russia, he replied "girls are funny. You just cannot tulk to them. They are hard to get along with. They always are complain ing about something. They are never satisfied. "But maybe some day I will meet a girl- you can get along with, a girl you can really get to know. Then I'll feel different about them," the Russian youth added. He said in Russia the boys re fer to girls as "snakes." He explained why with his hands indicating the name comes from a girl s "wiggle as she walks. Valery has been granted asylum here. Unsung Movie Actor Wins Fame In Stage Role By AI.IXK MOSBV I'nlted In-s Hollywood Writer HOLLYWOOD (UP) A quiet, balding actor- who worked unsung in 70 films at last won dune from a stage role,, but Lloyd Nolan de cided today lie still doesn't think of himself as a "star." The soft-spoken, modest Nolan for years worked steadily in films, but the reliable fixture wus virtual ly unnoticed in the lund of ballyhoo and busts. He wanted it that way. In fact, he admits, he once hired a press agent with instructions not to publicize him. , But in 1953 Nolan was acclaimed as a stage star for his prize role of Cupt. Queeg in "The Caine Mutiny Court Martial." After a long New York ran the Broadway cast moved to the new Huntington Hartford Theater here last week. The movie stars are turning out in droves to cheer the hometown boys who made good in the big city Nolan, Barry Sullivan and John Hudiak. But Nolan humbly shrugs off the honors. "A star is somebody who produc ers know will automatically add to the profits at the boxoffice," No lan reflected as he reluxed before curtain time at the theater. "I am happy not to be one. It gums up your life. Starsure hound ed and badgered until finally they have a shield around them. I ran walk around anyplace and hardly ever be noticed. His stage success has brought him more film offers, he confessed. "And better ones. I used to get only despicable heavies or private eyes" he added. "I'd like to do a film this summer after the 'Caine' closes, and I may go back to the stage next fall." Nolan may play "an interesting. good general, not at all like Queeg role has given me" will help him get a film directing job. "I've been directing sub rosa for years so I might as well get paid for It," he said with an easy grin. Tonight Nolan begins his 566th performance as Queeg. Originally, he revealed, producer Paul Greg ory wanted a younger man for the role but changed his mind after hearing Humphrey Bogart would be the movies' Queeg. So far Nolan hasn't missed a performance. He thinks his year of playing private eye Martin Kane on live TV in New York was "much tougher because I usually got in five fights per show. One safety note that makes Queeg an easier part: Those two steel balls that are his trademark are attached by a chain he can wrap around his hand. 'What if they were loose and rolled into the footlights? I'd have to get out of my chair and pick them up. I guess," he said. I.I'CKY PRINCETON, Ind. (UP) M. II. Hall of Birmingham, Ala., should consider himself lucky to appear in court today on speeding charges. Hall was charged by state police with speeding in a truck loaded with 21.000 pounds of dynamite Hall's truck overturned in a ditch and the dynamite didn't explode. 1 PxtTnTifl I 7UEC J KENTUCKY STtAIEHT B0UKI0R WHISKEY 16 noer "Show Stopper of the Auto Sbavr Show n here is a De Soto Fireflite Sportsman V iih he stylish new color sweep. -l.iA YouH stop the show whenever you go 1955 de Soto This year an entirely new creation in cars is causing a terrific stir of excitement wherever it's seen the stylish, and beautiful 1955 De Soto! Here, imaginatively fashioned in metal, fabric and glass, is a fresh, newborn thought in automobiles a bold, Forward step in looks . , . power , , . and under-hood performance. You see it outside in slim, taut lines . . . magnificently long, yet barely five feet high. You see it inside, too, in luxurious fabrics . . . glorious colors in fascinating mood ... a modern, stylish "Dual-Cockpit" instrument panel. And one turn behind the wheel reveals the thrill of bossing a DeSoto with surging V-8 power and such wonderful power assists as Powerflite Automatic Trans mission, Power Steering and Power Brakes. Today, see then drive the new DeSoto with the Forward Look, . FUNDINGSLAND MOTORS 162 Greenwood Phone 387: Bend Auto Show, Friday Night, 7 to 9 p.m., Oregon Street Spring Opening Flash! CHRYSLER'S 100-MILLION-DOLLAR LOOK! ping llhouetta rlca by tyll MKMKWKMKJKaKMKitMBaWKWflllMiB lllg1iriTWnrr'nKMnBaMKMKMHM STYLE-CONSCIOUS motorists are acclaiming the new Chrysler as America's most smartly different car. Longer, and inches lower than other big cars, Chrysler for 1955 exhibits the most striking new car design of recent years . . . even its new Super-Scenic Windshield (with sweptback posts for greatest, safest vision) enhances the car's sleek 1913 NEW YORKER DELUXE ST. REGIS look of forward motion. Chrysler looks like the performance car of the year, too, with its new 250 hp V-8 engino and fully-automatic Power Flite drive. Exclusive Kull-timo Power Steering . . . and Power Brakes with a new, safer acting double-width brake pedal . . . will certainly win a host of new friends. In all, this is a car too good to miss! SEE THEM ALL but see CHRYSLER and PLYMOUTH in Steam Heated Comfort In Our Showroom open till 9 p.m. RIGHT'S RIGHT AT EDDIE'S EDDIE'S SALES & SERVICE Chrysler Plymouth Wall & Greenwood PhcneM