J Capital Journal, Salem, 0r., Saturday, April 80, 1949 - ' - 'imiili tin i ijm When Ladles Meet Madeleine Carroll, itar, and Rita John- ton, featured In "Don't Trust Your Husband," have their trou bles In this highly sophisticated comedy at the Grand, starting tomorrow. Fred MacMurray is the male lead and Charles "Buddy" Rogers plays the "other man." Louise Allbritton and Alan Mowbray are also featured. Sinatra, Grayson In New Show Frank Sinatra and Kathryn Grayson co-star for the third time in M-G-Ms new musical romance, "The Kissing Bandit'' coming Tuesday to the Capitol theater. Their previous co-starring pictures were "Anchors Aweigh" and "It Happened in Brooklyn," and each also had a specialty number in "Till the Clouds Roll By." The supporting cast Is headed by J. Carrol Naish, Mildred Nat wick, Mikhail Ratumny, Billy Gilbert and Sono Osato with specialty dance by Rlcardo Montalban, Ann Miller and Cyd Charisse. Joe Pasternak produc ed; Laslo Benedek directed. The story is an adventurous romance in the days when Cali fornia was a colony of Spain Sinatra enacts a young Lochin- var intent on robbing the rich to give to the poor only to find himself the leader of as desper ate a band of marauders as ever stopped a stage coach. Miss Grayson portrays a love ly senorita who is rescued by the Kissing Bandit from a fate worse than death then finds that she cannot forget his voice his kisses. And the whole thing is played to the hilt for laughs. 'TREASURE FEVER' Tales of Pieces-of-Eight By Boy, 13, Start 'Rush' San Francisco iu.J A couple of 13-year-olds apologized today for causing such a fuss among the fishing folk of Penzance and Falmouth, England. They said they were only daydreaming about all that sunken treasure, David Curtis and hia part ner, Don Bibach, were as sur prised as anone when the news came from England that wild excitement had gripped the southwest coast of England. Cornish fishermen were re ported neglecting the bloater and kipper crop to talk about an American deep sea diver who planned to recover a gold and silver fortune that has lain on the ocean bottom for centuries. But the good people of Pen zance and Falmouth didn't know that the deep sea diver was a 13-year-old boy with a case of "treasure fever." It was Dave who got the idea f recovering the treasure. In consultation, with Don, he wrote a letter to the Falmouth Chamber of Commerce. He ask ed for maps, charts and other $20 Millions Lost On Super-Carrier Washington, April 30 U.R)tt Will cost $20,000,000 to cancel contracts for the navy's pro posed super aircraft carrier. Rep. James E. Van Zandt (R., Pa.), said today. Van Zandt, a member o( the House armed services commit tee, told the House $7,500,000 already had been spent on the carrier. Its eventual cost would have been f 189.000.000. "To terminate the contract and all subcontracts, it will cost the American taxpayer approxi mately $20,000,000," he said. He said this sum was "wasted' when Defense Secretary Louis Johnson "arbitrarily" scuttled plans for the 6S. 000-ton ship. Lewis Agrees to Open Negotiations Washington, April 30 din , John L. Lewis told southern coal producers today that he is willing to open negotiations for new soft coal contract on June 6 at Bluefield, W.Va. Last year, the United Mine workers president refused to bargain with the Southern Coal Producers association as a group but was forced to do so undrr court order. Recently, the southern produ cers beat Lewis to the punch and announced termination of their contract, effective June 30. Rainbow Garden Club Plans Summer Rest Stayton Care o( azaleas was discussed by Mrs. Roy Porter when the Rainbow Garden club met at the home of Mrs. Tony Mlnten, with Mrs. Otto Burson assistant hostess. The club decided to suspend meetings until fall after the next meeting at the- home of Mrs. Ethel Weltmer. At this meet ing, plant will be made tor the picnic which the club will hold loon. data about the Portuguese cara vel, St. Andrew, which sank off Mounts Bay, near Penzance. England, in 1S2S, and a Spanish galleon which struck the rocks a year later. News of the letter spread quickly. Fishermen soon were pacing the beach in search of doubloons and pieces-of-eight. Every few years a gold or sil ver coin dating back hundreds of years washes up on the beach. Scores of ships have been claim ed by Mounts bay's jagged rocks down through history. But no major expedition to retrieve the treasures has been attempted since 1867. The two boys, both eighth grade students at San Francis co's Presidio junior high school, got the idea to write the letter from a book called "I Dive for Treasure." Dave confessed the facts might have been stretched just a Httle in the note to Eng land. For instance," Dave con fessed, "I signed the letter Mis ter. 1 said I was a deep sea diver and had a lot of money to go diving for the treasure. bui gosn," ne added, "we wanted action and if they knew I was a kid they wouldn't have sent me anything. We didn't want to mislead anybody.' Dave ran Into the bedroom and came back waving a home made map. "I copied it from my book on diving," he said. "It shows where the ships went down in Mounts bay with all that money." The boys said they first be came "a bit uneasy" about the letter when Dave received a 25-mlnu(e phone call from a man In England, asking all about his experiences, hobbies "and everything." "He said he was a reporter on a paper in London. Mo mother didn't believe it and checked up. He was." The two youths said they thought people "were taking this all wrong." They recalled when they set out to "explore the Amazon" a year or so ago they didn't run into all this ex citement. At the time, they sent a letter to the Rio de Janiro Chamber of Commerce. "All we got," Dave said, "was a few pamphlets and a pretty good booklet." Dave and Don said they gave up exploration for deep-sea diving when Dave's father. At torney George Curtis, brought home a friend who was a real deep-tea diver. "He once had the bends," Dave said. Pinball Ban in Spokane Halted Spokane, April 30 C Bells will keep on ringing and lights will still flash on the city's pin ball machines for a while at least. A referendum petition asking a vote on an ordinance outlaw ing the devices was certified yes terday by City Clerk Alex Brown. The petition asking a vote on an ordinance outlawing the de vices was certified yesterday by City Clerk Alex Brown. The petition suspends the or dinance, which was to have gone into effect earlier this week, un til either a special election or the 1951 general election decides its fate. 1,1 Wallace Beery and Marjorie Main are the hilarious "Mr. and Mrs. Outlaw" in "Big Jack," M-G-M's action-and-laugh-packed frontier' story, which opens at the Elsinore theatre. There's romance, too, of course, in the persons, of Richard Conte and pretty Vanessa Brown. DeMolay to Run City for a Day The Salem Order of DeMolay will take over the reigns of city government on Friday, May 6, with ' Louis Lorenz acting as mayor of Oregon's capital for a day. Lorenz it the newly elected master councillor of the Chem eketa chapter. Other officials chosen by the organization to step into the shoes of public servants for a day are: Boo Meany, city manager; Jim Rock, city engineer; Howard Wilson, police chief; Merlin Schulze, fire chief; Bob McConville, po lice judge; Don Hughes, record er; Daryl Girod, treasurer, and Jim Todd, city attorney. A luncheon of regular city of ficials and their DeMolay count erparts is scheduled for noon on the day the youths take over at the Senator hotel. The fol lowing Monday, the chapter ex pects to send a delegation to the city council session. On next Thursday, the city of- ficials will be invited to a chap ter dance at Glenwood ballroom A king and queen will be chos- IS SHE SHORT ON CLOTHES Princess Margaret Appears In Same Dress Three Days Capri, April 30 (U.R) Princess Margaret of Great Britain wore the same gray dress for the third straight day today, causing afternoon papers to wonder in print if the had only one dress When the princess emerged from her hotel at 11:30 i. m.lA , i uyster pacKers Lose Court Battle San Francisco, April 30 W) How much oyster can an oyster packer pack in an 11-ounce can? At least 84 ounces, said the federal circuit court of appeals here yesterday, in upholding a $10 Millions for Yet Loans Approved Portland, April 30 (IP) An other $10,000,000 soon will be available for financing veterans' farm and home loans in Oregon. The state department of vet erans affairs authorized a bond issue in that amount to continue the program started in 194S. Previously $15,000,000 was rais ed in three series of bonds. That sum is expected to be exhausted by June 30. A subcommittee will draft a program to use funds provided for veterans' rehabilitation by the state legislature. It also was decided to ask congress to extend the adjust ment allowance to jobless veter ans past the July 25 deadline. after a breakfast of tea and toast, she was In the gray dress trimmed with white, and the same white shoes and acces sories she wore yetterday and the day before. Newsmen entered Caru to ac company Margaret. They were told that only four British photographers, picked by Brit ish officials who arranged her tour here, could go along. She was whisked away in a blue convertible to the villa of Edwin Cerio, Italian author. She had 'been invited by Cerio's sister-in-law and his daughter. After lunch she was expected to go swimming in a tiny shelt ered bay from which newsmen were barred. Silverton Mrs. C. E. Higin botham and her daughter, Mrs. Clifford Robinson of Scotts Mills, drove to Independence and Salem Thursday for fun eral services and final rites for an aunt of Mrs. Higinbotham,' Mrs. Clara Pagenkoff, 77, who died unexpectedly at her Inde pendence home Tuesday. James STEWART JOAN FONTAINE In "YOU GOTTA 8TAY HAPPY" and Jeanette Mat DONALD Claude Jannan, Jr. LatMe X! I "THE SUN I I COMES UP" 1 I BUBBLES HAS BUBBLE BATH Shy 1,800 Pound Hippo to k Be Flown to Mate-to-Be Chimin. Anril 30 (UB Bubbles had a bubble bath and went on a diet today as she prepared to meet her maU-to-be in Columbus, Ohio. shy, 1,800-' Bubbles is the pound hippopotamus at the Brookfield zoo who has been staging a sit-down against going to Columbus for romance with Pete, a hippo in the Columbus zoo. A week ago Bubbles refused to leave her cage and enter i traveling cage. Zoo attendants left the carrier cage backed up to her zoo quarters and finally lured her in with a bale of hay, garlic and lettuce. For the past few days she has made frequent trips into the car rier while her attendants gave her time to get used to It, She was scheduled to leave for Columbus during the day, Robert Bean, Brookfield zoo director, said Bubbles spent a "quiet night" in the carrier cage. The bath, he said, was quite necessary. 'Bubbles smells of that gar lic," he said. The diet was to Insure that Bubbles would be in light-, hearted spirits when she meets Pete. She'll be given only "a couple of heads of lettuce" while en route to Columbus. "Animals are like children," Bean said. "They bolt their food when they get excited, and we don't want Bubbles to kick up too much on the trip." Banquet Bet Tuesday Hopewell The H o p c w ell United Brethren church mother and daughter banquet will' be held Tuesday evening, May 3 at the church. federal food and drug adminis tration order against Willapoint Oysters. Inc., of Seattle. The company contended in its lengthy court battle that to put more than its present five ounces in a can would result in browned, twisted and broken oysters. The court didn't agree. ITArM5rNrl JM Opens 7 P.M. 1 1 8 tarts at pusk I I 1 1 James Ellison I I I Jane Frazee I I I "LAST OF THE I f II WILD HORSES" If r I Marlon Martin I H III "THUNDER IN If ill COLOR-CARTOON I Ml LATE NEWS Iff Hi SUNDAY. MONDAY 'Fighter Squadron" In Technicolor TONIGHT! "MAN FROM TEXAS" "BRING 'KM RACK ALIVE" t.NHS TODAY -NO MINOR VICES" Dana Andrews - tlllle Palmel "GUN SMUGGLERS" Tomorrow ConL 1:45 L v irs wonder-r KllfflTED VMEY New EWoodbara PIX Theatre: Oregon i O-SO-EASY SEATS a Ends Sot 'A Southern Yankee" Sun. & Mon, Introdurlng and atarrinff Glnrer, Prince In "The Lowton Story" I Abo "ON Om MERRY WAY" Paulrtt Goddard, June Strwart Fred MarMurray, Hrnrr Fonda Western HORSE SHOW Sponsored by The Willamette Valley Horseman's Association Oregon Mounted Pots Salem Saddle Club FAIRGROUNDS STADIUM May 7 - 8 P.M. - May 8 - 2 P.M. $1000 Matched Calf Roping Contest Western Hon rents - Stock Hortt trend Bora-lack Irenes . Wild Cow Milkinf ADMISSION: Bos Seats tl.St tax Included.' General Admiwloa ll.Oe tax Included. Children It and ander 40c tax Included. 1W" w Wf. . merftir.sm TOMORROW! 0forf r-v t V. r - . ism kufrwitw tutor. .! 1 IWIla .atlfl t lesuni la Ms anas I .f alftllll tli'rY in jfc?-ss--"5-" 1ND BIG HIT! High -Tension Advtntarr! Danrw-Flllrd Drama! 'PAROLE, INC . . the nation's most dangerous racket! Starring Michael O'Shea Turhan Bey Evelyn Ankers 'EDWARD ARNOLD VANESSA BROWN a Mmo-eoiDWTN-MATi pi cruet EXTRA! COLOR CARTOON "Saner Droopy" Latest World Wide Warner News ENDS TODAY Cont. Shows Robert Mltchnm "BLOOD ON THE MOON" Ann Corlo "SULTAN'S DAUGHTER" TOMORROW! Glnser Rosen - Cary Grant 'ONCE UPON A HONEYMOON" "THUNDER MTV ENDS TODAY! ABBOTT - COSTELLO "HOLD (SAT.) THAT GHOST" - "HIRED WIFE" PH. S-37Z1 CONT. FROM 1 P.M. TOMORROW! NEW! VITAL! The True Story of China! As Timely as Today's Headlines! hi lONDIGHM-aBROCE J Thrill Co-Hit! First Showing in Salem! Ph. 3-3467 Mat. Daily From 1 P.M. STARTS TOMORROW! FRED MacMURRAY MADELEINE CARROLL ENDS TODAY! (Sot.) Deug Fairbanks "FIGHTING O'FLYNN" Gloria Henry "LAW OF BARBARY COAST" I J 4" - i nCA T SiT 1 CMAHIB "BUDDY J r?W ) ROGERS CO-HIT! WOMEN GO FOR SVX. i ill mrwfUDf-l """ Airmail Fox Movietone News! t