Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, October 12, 1946, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    1
I'1 Locals 'ii
Donald G. Saidon of the Star
buck Cottages was driving at
Court and Liberty Friday when
a door of his car flew open.
He said he lost control of his
car and collided with two parked
vehicles, one of which was a
panel t"iick owned by Bernard
Stacey, 1630 North 19th. Doors
and fenders of the truck were
damaged.
Dance every Saturday, Cot
tonwood:. Good music & floor.
242
New shipment of toilet tissue
at Englewood Grocery, 975
North 18th. 242
Dance tonite Crystal Gardens.
24:
Practically new electric fan
Call after 7 p.m. Mildred R.
Brooks, 160 Salem Heights ave
nue. Phone 22518. 242
Permanent positions open for
two salesladies. Hours 9:30 to
5:30. Apply Worths Depart
ment Store, 177 North Liberty
street. 242
Damage was done by a roof
fire at 661 North Front street
Friday afternoon, and firemen
also were called to 417 South
12th where a small furnace ex
plosion occurred but did not
damage.
Dance tonight Silverton Ar
mory. Woodry's Orchestra 14.
242
Just received a few pressure
sauce pans. Broadway Appli
ance company, 419 Ferry, Sa
lem. 242
15, 32, 42-gallon electric
water heaters for immediate de
livery. Broadway Appliance
company, 419 Ferry, Salem.
242
Complete stock Kern-Tone
the miracle wall finish at Sears
Dance tonite Crystal Gardens.
242'
Justice of the Peace Joseph
B. Felton has returned from a
hunting trip and will be at his
office Monday for business as
usual. Prior to going hunting
he attended the republican con
vention in Portland where he
was re-elected president of Ore
gon Republican clubs.
Rummage Sale 18th, 19th, 9
a.m. Salem Women's Club. 460
N. Cottage. 242
Lost: Brown billfold, papers
important to E. W. Morgan. Re
ward. Phone 21422. 242
Tomatoes U pick $1.25. L.
T3nV.nn(D CUnnl Tl U
22578.
244
f
Taylor's Grocery now open.
3193 Sunnyview Avenue. 242
Large modern downtown res
taurant, 4 year lease with 5 year
option, excellent equipment,
large seating capacity see us
for full particulars. Lee Ohmart
& Company, Realtors, 477 Court
Street. Phone 9680. 244
Certificate of assumed busi
ness name for Acme Collection
Agency has been filed with the
county clerk by Paul E. Skeen,
234 North Liberty, and certifi
cate of retirement from the same
business by L. L. Balch and C.
F. Foulger.
Betty Burks Vocalist & Gor
don Winchcomb Guitarist arc
featured with the Glen Woodry
Orchestra tonite & every Satur
day nite at (he Silverton Ar
mory. 242
Dance tonight Silverton Ar
mory. Woodry's Orchestra 14
242
Waitress, full time, no Sun
days. Golden Pheasant. 245
Just received novelty crepe
and wool dresses, new suits.
Gilmores Dress Shop 439 Court.
244
Report by Ted Kuenzi, coun
ty bridge foreman, recommends
that a bridge on the Willard
'Evergreen road be raised four
feet and approaches be resur
faced to conform with a road
curve and that the bridge be
made safe for travel. A dele
This Funny.,Wor!d
I 10-12 .MeXntfM Syndicate, Ine.
Wt teem to bt
gation recently waited on the
county court asking for im
provement at this point and the
court with road officials later
inspected the conditions, this re
port resulting from the inspection.
Professional Tree Surgeons
available for a limited time in
Salem. We carry property in
surance. Phone 2-4030. 245
Painting, decorating. 7552.
245
Insured savings earn more
than two percent at Salem Fed
eral Savings Association, 13
South Liberty street.
Dance tonite Crystal Gardens.
' 242
Originators of Wimpy's, Tom
Hill and Frank Starr. New lo
cation Valley Junction. Try us
tor good tood. 245
Beverly Emmons, 14, who
lives at 1687 North Summer
street, suffered an arm frac
ture Friday while skating in
the basement of her home, first
aid reported. She was taken
to Salem General hospital.
The county court has post
poned for several weeks hearing
which was to have been held
Friday on naming a street run
ning east off of Lancaster drive
between Earl avenue and Cen
ter street as Denver avenue.
Further investigation of the area
involved will be made.
Turkey Pickers report for
work 8:30 Monday morning,
Marion Creamery and Poultry
Co. 242
Tricycles and sidewalk hicv
cles. Broadway Appliance com
pany, 4iu terry. Salem. 242
Dance tonite Crystal Gardens.
242
Speaker for the Hollywood
Lions next Wednesday will be
Lynn Cronemiller, assistant
state forester. He will be in
troduced by Al Crose. "Ro
mances in Forests" will be
Cronemiller's subject.
Electric Glo-Logs and room
heaters. Broadway Appliance
company, 419 Ferry, Salem.
242
Dance tonight Silverton Ar
mory. Woodry's Orchestra 14
242
Mrs. Armena Felt of the
Spencers Support Shop of Port
land will be at the Senator hotel
Monday, October 14, to deliver
garments and anyone interested
in Spencer supports call Sena
tor hotel. 243
Winona Chalet Restaurant
and Drive-In now open. Ital
ian food as you like it. Chicken
and steaks. Featuring home
made strawberry shortcake.
Only 2 miles from heart of town
on Salem-Dallas Highway. Open
5 p.m. For reservations phone
25190.
Townsend club No. 2 will
meet at the Courthouse Monday,
Oct. 14, at 8 p.m. for election
of officers.
Books by Glenn Clark and
other Metaphysical Books for
sale. Orders taken for Christ
mas gifts mailed to any address.
495 North Cottage, corner Mar
ion. Phone 8636. 242
Dance tonite Crystal Gardens.
242
Wanted Experienced office
girl with knowledge of general
bookkeeping, posting and typ
ing. Gas Heat, Incorporated.
Phone 3445, Salem, Oregon.
244
Nebraska auxiliary will meet
Wednesday with Mrs. Ray Os
born with a no-host luncheon
at noon. Take Four Corners bus
at Bush bank to Elma avenue.
Colored hydrangeas, Camel
lias, shrubs. Knight Pearcy
Nursery, 375 South Liberty (3
blocks south of State). 243
Refinlsh your own floors'
Rent a floor sander from Wood
row's, 440 Center st.
Dance tonite Crystal Gardens.
242
picking up speed."
Sgt. James Phillips, son of Mr
and Mrs W. L. Phillips, who
has been stationed at Adak in
the Aleutian Islands for the past
ning months, is expected to be
on board a ship scheduled to
dock at Seattle next week.
Old time dance. 259 Court
242
Insurance, Kenneth M. Potts,
339 Chemcketa St. Phone 5981
242
Dexter Grinding Service. 6833
242
Dancing to the music of Wally
Steed and his orchestra every
night except Monday at Nor
mandy Manor. Steaks available
242
Dance tonite Crystal Gardens.
242'
A. B. McLaughlan, head of
the A. B. McLaughlan machin
shop, who has been receiving
treatment in a hospital at Oak
land, Calif., is expected to re
main a: the hospital for another
ten days according to work re
ceived here.
30 and 50-gullon automatic
gas water heaters for immediate
delivery. Broadway Appliance
company, 419 Ferry, Salem.
24
Lawnmowers, a few left.
$19.60. Broadway Appliance
company. 419 Ferry, Salem.
242
Start your 3 to 6-year-old
child in music fundamentals.
Phone 7186. 242
Fall bulbs, full selection, fine
quality Jary Florist. 365 Court
Dr. Harold O. Schneider, for
mcrly with the Cleveland Clinic
at Cleveland, O., and for three
and a half years in the navy,
two years of which were spent
overseas, is opening offices in
the First National bank build
ing. He is a specialist in inter-J
nal medicine. Since arriving
here in February he has been
connected with the Salem Clinic.
Dance tonight Silverton Ar
mory. Woodry's Orchestra 14
242
7x9 used walk-in cooler, com
plete with meat racks, shelving,
1 reach-in door, 1 h.p. compres
sor. Burton Refrigeration Com
pany, 3050 Portland Road
Phone 24060
Dance every Saturday. Sil
verton Armory. Woodry's Or
chestra. 242
Winona Chalet Restaurant
and Drive-In now open. Ital
ian food as you like it. Chicken
and steaks. Only 2 miles from
heart of town on Salem-Dallas
Highway Open 5 p.m. For res
ervations phone 25190. '
Russell Rose, 53, is reported to
the police as having run away
from Oregon State hospital. His
home is in Lebanon.
Dance tonite Crystal Gardens
242'
One-half acre tracts. Good
soil, located East. Price $395
and up. Easy terms, buy now
and have a location to build
your future home. Graben
horst Brothers, Realtors, 134
South Liberty. Phone 4131.
243
Refinlsh your own floors
Rent a floor sander from Wood-
row's, 440 Center street
Taxll Valley Cab. Prompt
service Phone 8624.
Clifford Mathistad, employe
of Mayflower dairy, 2135 Fair
grounds reported to the police
Saturday that for the last three
nights some vandal has removed
the license plate from his auto
mobile and left it lying on the
ground near the car.
River silt and fill dirt. Com
mercial Sa-d and Gravel. Phone
21966
E. E. King, resident of the
Fir Crest Trailer camp, inform
ed police Saturday that a thief
had gotten into his automobile
and stolen a work shirt, an army
blanket, two pairs of overalls
and a jacket. The car was
parked at the time on Center
street in front of Salem Labor
temple. W. C. Wilson, 750 Mon
roe, reported that the dash clock
was taken from his car Friday
night while the car was parked
on Waverly street and he was
at the Willamctte-Linfield foot
bail same.
DeLuxe Cab Phone 8050.
See complete line Color Per
fect wall paper at Sears
Free Dirst. Phone 6196. 242
Approximately 65 young peo
ple from the Hayesville Baptist
church were given the facilities
of the YMCA for a number of
hours Friday night. The group
was in charge of Rev. Barnett,
pastor. Saturday forenoon the
Y was alive with grade school
boys, some 200 having respond
ed to the invitation to play
games, swim in the pool, wres
tle and box in the third floor
gymnasium. The program was
being supervised by Jim Dimit,
physical director and a number
of junior leaders.
"Write a letter week" will be
observed beginning Sunday,
Oct. 13, reminds Postmaster Al
bert Gragg. The "week" has
the sanction of the post office
department which urges its pa
trons to write long delayed letters.
If fAJk iifeiS
- ; '. sSr
One Meat Shortage Solved v)'i Junior, one of the biggest hogs
ever brought to the Detroit stockyards, dozes peacefully while
Arthur Bockford, a salesman for the Michigan Livestock Ex
change, registers understandable amazement. The animal weighs
1070 pounds.
1006 Students
At Willamette
One thousand six students are
enrolled for the fall semesler at
Willamette university inclusive
of 44 special students according
to registration figures released
by registrar Harold B. Jory at
the end of the period of grace
for late entrants. Enrollment in
liberal arts courses totals 844,
while 91 are entered in the col
lege of law and 71 in the col
lege of music.
For the first time since the
fall of 1941, the number of
men enrolled outnumbers wom
en, and by a decisive figure of
635 to 371. Three hundred fifty
nine freshmen make this year's
rook class one of the largest tn
the school's history. The sopho
more class is also one of the
largest in many years with 263
Upper classes, which suffered
a decided thinning of ranks dur
ing the war years, have climb
ed back into prominence with
150 listed for the juniors and
101 credited to the seniors.
Registration for night classes
will be held open for a few
more days to accommodate late
returning veterans who are un
able to enroll in fulltime liberal
arts programs. Total registra
tion for the night school to
date numbers 30.
Chest Fund $889
Short of Its Quota
When a check of returns was
made at the final luncheon
meeting of the Community
Chest at noon Friday the cam
paigners were $889 short of the
$80,085 quota for the commu
nity. But that amount is in
sight and the campaign will not
end until the quota is reached.
Several representatives o f
large business concerns that
have headquarters in other
cities have yet to receive author
ization for their contributions,
which are certain, though de
layed in some cases.
At the Friday meeting A. C.
Haag was elected director of the
drive for next year. He was
pre-campain chairman this
year. Heading the drive this
year was Tinkham Gilbert.
Court News
Circuit Court
The case of state vs. Scott Bremmsr,
on appeal from Justice court on a drun
ken driving charcr. went io tha Jury In
Judge E. M Page's court about 11:30
Friday mornlnc.
Answer in Edward
vs. Edna M.
Waiden admits and denies.
Trial or Olrnn Moody on a rape charite
which had hern postponed from Octnbrr
S to next Monday, has nttain been post
poned by Circuit Judge E. M. Pane.
Complaint for divorce by Jean W. vs.
Edward Julius Rlccl allege.-; cruel and In
human treatment, asks custody of a child
and 2S a month for its support. Mar
ried November 32. 1043 at West Salem.
Dofnult orders enterfd In Olorla
Jcannette vs. Cecil P. Velth and Anna
D. vs. Melvln C. Whites Ides.
Amended complaint filrd In E. L. and
Anna Dcnn vs. Callcn Ellis and others.
Answer admitting and denylnt filed
In Levi L. Yoder vs. Charles L. Holway.
Jury In case of State vs. Scott James
Brcmmer returned a verdict Friday af
ternoon finding him innocent of a charge
of driving while under Influence of In
toxicating Unuor. The case came up on
appeal from Justice court.
Probate Court
Inheritance tax of 13S1 80 hso been
determined on the estate of Eafcar W
Myers.
Appraisal of 14883.65 has been made on
the estate of Anton A. Pfelfer by Al Sel
ler. Leonard Thacker and Lea Harvey.
Pioneer Trust company has been
named administrator of the 13500 es;ate
of John Brabatin and appraiser! are
Ruth Busch. Prudence Paulson and U P.
Mew an.
D. C. Burton has been named executor
of the estate of Clay C. Toothacre and
appraisers are Margaret Kurth, Lewis Mc
Kinney and Walter Eberhard.
Police Court
Vagrancy: Robert O'Mallay. transient.
Violation of traffic lights: Raymond
Edward Page. 1255 Court. Olen Lorain
Claile. 1108 Lewis. S2.50.
Violation of stop sign: Robert Schwleht-
enburg, 4B6 North 14th. Richard Stuart
Fry, 2076 South Church. William Jack
Rutledge t2 60.
Violation of the basic speed rule: Stan
ley C. Mason. Portland. 17.50. Wesley A
McDanlel, Portland, 110.
Marriage Licenses
William B Hamilton. 27, sheet metal.
and Doris Fuqua, ?4. clerk, both Salem.
James N. Bacon. 21, student, and Ha
zel V. Uyi, 21, clerk, both Salem.
Shell Group
Studies Asnhalt
Salem was visited Friday by
a group of 15 asphalt technicians
of the Shell Group companies,
who have come to the United
States from all corners of the
world to study uses of asphalt
on highways, airports, reser
voirs, canal linings and river re
vertments. The group, now on tour of
the Pacific coast, is making the
trip by bus. While here they
visited the stale highway la
boratories and interviewed tech
nicians there. They spent a
month on the east coast and in
the middle west and came from
Chicago to Los Angeles. Leav
ing Los Angeles on the wect
coast tour, the technicians have
made stops at Sacramento, Reno,
and Winncmucca, Nevada,
Boise, Pasco, Yakima, Seattle
and Portland before coming to
Salem from where they will go
to Eureka, Calif., and then to
San Francisco.
W. L. Campbell, technical
manager of the bitumen depart
ment in London, is in general
charge of the tour and arranging
the west coast trip was Ray
mond Harsch, west coast man
ager of the asphalt department
of the Shell company. A. A.
Amort, Portland asphalt repre
sentative of the company, is in
charge of the Oregon visit and
arranging for the Salem stop
was John C. Emlen.
The technicians are Blott,
Jackson, Kennerell, Bateman
and Van Asbeck of the United
Kingdom; Luther, Slotboom
Stoop and De Graaff of Holland
Linekenheyl of France; Mel
ville of Egypt; Scott of New
Zealand and Smith of Australia
Parade Starts at
Dorchester House
Excursionists from Salem eo-
ing To the coast Sunday to help
the people at the beaches cele
brate the opening of the new
highway are to meet at the Dor
chester house at 2 p. m. and it
is understood the parade will
start from there.
The trip from Salem, which
is under Chamber of Commerce
auspices, will include the Sa
lem high school band, riding in
three chartered buses of the
Greyhound company, about 50
Cherrians in uniform, Chamber
of Commerce officials and any
others who want to go.
Aside from the high school
band the conveyance will be by
private vehicles, and some of
them will go on Saturday.
The Moore family, residing at
3700 North River road, report
ed to the sheriff's office Satur
day lhat during the night some
one had removed a pane of
glass from one of the windows
in the house, but evidently
scared by the barking dog in
side, had restored the glass to
its position and. so far as known
nothing else was disturbed.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Harold
have returned from a week's
trip to California where they
visited their daughter and hus
band, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip F.
McKinlcy of Palo Alto. Mc
Kinlay Is a student at Stanford
university.
The Salem Rotary club will
sponsor a one night stage ap
pearance of "Life With Father,"
November 5th, according to de
cision of the board of directors.
The cast is the one that played
a long run in New York City
and their appearance in Salem
is possible because a break in
their regular schedule along the
Pacific coast, between Seattle
and Los Angeles occurred.
Building permits; Joe Hutchi
son, to build a greenhouse at
615 North 15th, $50. John
Scharff, to build a temporary
dwelling at 1593 South 22nd,
$1000. Paul E. Davies, to alter
a one-story dwelling at 915
South 21st, $850. Guy M. Wat
son, to repair a l'-story dwell
ing at 345 Kearney, $50. Marie
Lambert, to build a garage at
1445 Nebraska, $250.
A dwelling fire in the United
States occurs once every 90 sec
onds.
Realtors Told
Of Willamette
With the expenditure of ap
proximately a half million dol
lars, including its own budget
and that of the 1000 students on
the campus, Willamette univer
sity is one of the larger business
concerns in Salem, said Robert
Fenix, business manager (luring
an address Friday noon before
the Salem Board of Realtors.
The university will continue to
turn out graduates in liberal
arts, law and music, the busi
ness manager stated alter de
tailing a part of the building
program for the next few years.
A men's dormitory with a ca
pacity of 200 students is the
next structure to be built and it
is the hope of the trustees that
actual work will begin within
the next few months. However,
all of the more than 1000 stu
dents are housed either on the
campus or off the grounds in
their own buildings or in pri
vate homes.
Buildings on the campus are
valued at $600,000, ground at
$250,000 and equipment at
$150,000.
Records show that Emily J.
York was the first official gra
duate of Willamette. She left
the campus in 1859 with a de
gree of "mistress of literature."
Waller hall was built during
the period of 18B4 to '67.
Reclamation
Troubles Listed
Omaha, Oct. 11 The lim
itation placed by congress on
the number of bureau of recla
mation employes is one of the
obstacles holding back the bu
reau's vast development pro
gram for the west, W. G. Sloan
of Billings. Mont., co-author of
the "Pick-Sloan" plan, declar
ed today.
Two other principal obstacles,
he told the national reclamation
association in a prepared ad
dress, are rising construction
costs and President Truman's
$85,000,000 ceiling on bureau
work for the current fiscal year
The last congress froze the
bureau's maximum personnel as
of July 1.
"We find ourselves in the
position of having preliminary
preparations to embark upon a
huge construction program, only
to have much of it curtailed be
cause of the combination of
these three events," Sloan, the
bureau's assistant sixth region
al director said.
Eat More Potatoes,
Onions, Says Snell
Gov. Earl Snell today urged
Oregonians to cat more pola
toes and onions. He said a
bumper crop of these two vege
tables has caused a surplus be
cause of limited storage facili
ties. The governor suggested that
cooperation on the part of retail
ers and housewives in "greater
utilization of these commodities
during the next three or four
weeks would be of considerable
assistant in alleviating the prob
lem.'1 Certificate of assumed busi
ness name has been filed with
the counly clerk by Robert E.
Corey and Arthur M. Erickson
for Corey's Fountain, Lana ave
nue and Portland road.
Counly Judge and Mrs. Grant
Murphy are leaving Sunday for
a visit with relatives in Modes
to, Calif, and Oakland, Calif.,
the judge expecting to he back
in his office Monday, October
28.
Injured (IP) Identified by po
lice as Albert A. Adams, 27, said
by New York FBI agents to be
wanted in connection with the
slaying of a California state
highway patrolman, this discon
solate police van passenger waits
outside New York federal court
for transportation to a doctor
for treatment of a foot injury.
He incurred the injury in an
escape attempt. Bail was set at
$25,000 pending a removal hearing.
us ' hf)
f s I ' '
ir lr-' '$L
Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, Oct. 12, 19469
iff 1 W if .
1.x"
........ ,,..j..a Jt?..;-s-,v.v.,..Jtt
OTficcr Kills Wife uv Mistake W") Aimv Lt. Dean M. Bressler
(Ictl) accidentally shot and killed his wife, Margaret, 23 (right),
in their apartment, mistaking her for a burglar. Dr. W. C. Wei
burn, Arlington, Va., county medical examiner, issued a certifi
cate of accidental death.
Dehydrated Pepper Pack
Process Perfected at Cannerv
The experimental dehydrated pepper pack being put up at
the Blue Lake cannery in West Salem while still in the embryo
stage now has the packing process sufficiently ironed out so as the
local concern will be able toj
compete with other parts of the
United States, in the opinion of
Wayne Yocom, production man
ager of the plant, who says that
it also has been demonstrated
lhat the crop is looking all right
also from the growers' produc
tion standpoint.
The pack which started about
September 1 is expected to con
tinue until frost. While green
peppers have been packed some
of them are going into the red
stage and these also will be de
hydrated. The peppers after dehydra
tion are packed in five gallon
cans and this way arc shipped
to the distributing concern
which in turn repacks them in
half ounce cartons. Both the
green and red peppers are pack
ed together making a tasty look
iug product which is cut into
small bits and used from the
small containers.
The peppers are grown in the
Jefferson and Dayton areas
About 80 acres arc in produc
tion this year and they are ex
pected to produce from four to
five tons to the acre. A very
fine looking product being de
livered at the plant.
The Blue Lake concern is now
also in the midst of its cauli
flour pack, this product also
coming from the Jefferson and
Dayton areas. This pack started
September 25 and is expected
to continue on to November 25
or December 1. The cauliflour
is all frozen in 10 ounce cartons
and carries the "Snow Crop" la
bel, being distributed by the
Snow Crop Marketeers with
headquarters in New York City.
The Saturday Evening Post re
cently carried a page advertise
ment from this concern with the
cauliflour produced here as a
feature.
Corn and beets also arc being
canned at present and corn is
likewise being put up in a frozen
pack. Both of these crops are
expected to wind up in about
eight days. Both corn and beet
packs are larger than those put
on by the plant last year and
these also conic from the Jef
ferson and Dayton areas.
Fall of Mm
'Continued from Pace 1)
The main communist defenses
lay to the southeast and this
entry by Kalgan's back door
may have taken the garrison by
surprise, although it was known
that Fu's columns w ere ap
proaching. The apparent ease with which
the government's army took
Kalgan indicated. however,
that the communists had with
drawn to cscnpe entrapment,
taking to the hills that surround
the city
Asked by a newsman if the
fall of Kalgan meant the end of
negotiations, communist spokes
man Wagn Ping-Nan, highest
ranking members of the delega
tion remaining in Nanking, re
plied: "We must wait and sec."
The communists moved into
Kalgan in August of 1945 short
ly after Japan surrendered. The
city became the major link be
tween communist zones in Man
churia and Inner Mongolia.
Three Salem men, Pfc. Marvin
C. Cleveland of 1450 Market
street, Cpl. Theodore F. Man
kcrlz, Jr . of 105 Manbrin Drive,
and Staff Sgt. Ralph A. McCoy
of 295 South 22nd street, were
in the group of Oregon soldiers
receiving their discharges at Ft.
Lewis October 9. Also In the
group were Tech. 5 Hcrry E.
Friesen and Tech. 5 Frank M.
Watson, both of Dallas, Tech. 8
Vernon R. Sample of Falls City
and Cpl. Albert S. Schnider of
Ml, Angel.
' "MS
.tiA.waaii;ihit'.-..-.-j!....--.. :-w. ...t-.-.u'J
Strike Closes
Hearst Paper
Los Angeles, Oct. 12 U.R The
strike-bound plant of the Los
Angeles Evening - Herald-Express,
with the largest circula
tion in the west, was locked
up today after CIO Newspaper
Guild employes removed per
sonal belongings from the build
ing. The Hearst daily has not pub
lished since Sept. 4, but execu
tives and maintenance have re
ported to work daily.
Only watchmen remained oh
duty and Victor Dunsmore,
business manager, said last pay
checks for mechanical depart
ment workers would be issued
Oct. 19. He said it was no
longer financially feasible to
pay non-striking members of
typographical unions.
Negotiations between Hearst
chain executives and the guild
were at a standstill. The guild
demanded 40 percent wage in
creases and $100 weekly top
minimum for journeymen edito
rial workers, but later scaled
this down by one third. Man
agement offered a 12'i percent
increase.
Bill Too High
(Continued from Pane D
"For humanitarian reasons we
arc unable to look with favor
upon inserting in a treaty of
peace the principle of forced
transfer of populations by uni
lateral action," he said, adding
that he hoped the method of bi
lateral negotiation would be
used in dealing with some other
disagreements between Hungary
and Romania which has been
awarded heavily Magyar-populated
northern Transylvania.
Yugoslav and Czechoslovak
delegates hinted broadly in their
statements that Hungary was an
unsatisfactory tenant of the
Danube basin.
Slanjoe Simic of Yugoslavia
implied this was due to western
pressure at Hungary's "gateway
to the Balkans," saying some
powers were "trying to play one
Balkan country against anoth
er."
Other Danubian countries,
Simic said, were waiting for
Hungary "to free herself com
pletely from her revisionist
complex" referring to desires
for eventual revisions in Hun
gary's favor.
There are about 850.000 build
ing fires every year in the Unit
ed States.
First Presbyterian
Church
Chcmckcla at Winter St.
CHESTER W. nAMBLIN. Pltr
Frantii If. Chamhrr. A.ll. T.tor
9:45 a.m. Church School
10:55 a m. "On Being Re
sponsible," Sermon by
the pastor
7:30 p.m. "Taking Jesus
Seriously," Sermon by
Mr. Chambers