Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, May 14, 1949, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Saturday. May 14, 1949 1
! f ' ill S tJ' W-
C4v
j N X' iff
Norm Shearer, star of "The Red Shoes," J. Arthur Rank
technicolor masterpiece and winner of three academy awards,
starting its roadshow engagement at the State theater, Sunday,
May 15.
Blasted Tunnel
Debris Cleared
New York, May 14 W Bull
dozers scraped through deep ooze
' and matted wreckage today to
clear the blast-seared Holland
tunnel for its daily load of 46,000
cars and trucks,
A big truck, rolling towards
New York with a cargo of chem
icals, blew up Friday morning.
It spewed fire and poisonous gas
through 300 feet of the tratlic
clogged tunnel.
Normal vehicular traffic may
be resumed tomorrow morning.
Austin J. Tobin, executive di
rector of the New York Port Au
thority, said after an inspection
trip today that the New York
bound tube would be restored to
service "at the earliest tommor
row morning and at the latest
Monday."
Tobin said however, that the
tube would be closed from 10 to
12 hours a night for a month or
two to permit repair work to
proceed. Damage may total $1,
000,000.
The New Jersey bound tube
was reopened five hours after
the accident.
iSixty-six persons, mostly fire
men and tunnel workers, collap
sed or staggered groggily from
the tunnel's smoke-befogged
depths during a five-hour battle
with fire and fumes.
Twenty-six were taken to hos
pitals with burns or gas poison
ing. None was reported In dan
ger. Phillips, Knapp to
Go lo Scout Meet
Cascade area council. Boy
Scouts of America, will be rep
resented by W. L. Phillips and
Gardner Knapp when the na
tional council of the organiza
tion holds its 39th annual meet
ing In Boston, Mass., May 23
(nd 24. The two men plan to
Join a group of approximately
AO delegates In Seattle for I he
trip across the continent by
train.
"Strengthen the Arm of Lib
erty" will be the theme of the
conference that will bring to
gether more than 1200 men in
terested in scouting. Speakers
Ends Today!
"The Polcfoce"
"Winn.r't Circle"
Starts Tomorrow Cont. 1:48
M'tiiU UMH. I ClOw marshau
KfcLOKU rfcAlt Mfcl
"1 t.r.An aoiiirRK
Tom Conway - Maria ralmer
St TAR !
is
Hill
SUSAN HMRD "3SJ
oris RARtorr 2IY
WtWIIMM CT 1
m mm I ttf ,' 1
Mam ism I ' "
. 1
will inclde Dr. James B. Con-
ant, president of Harvard uni
versity; Dr. Lewis Perry, prin-
pinnl empritiis nf Phillin F.xeter
acedemy; Rev. Richard J. Cush-
lng, archbishop of Boston and
Dr. Luther A. Wcigle, dean of
the Yale divinity school.
Conklin Heads
Logging Group
Eugene, May 14 () In the
closing session Saturday morn
ing delegates to the 11th annual
meeting of the Willamette Valley
Logging conference elected Rob
ert Conklin, of Weyerhaeuser
Timber company of North Bend
as president.
Faye Abrams, Booth Kelly
Lumber company, was named
treasurer; Weldon Kline, Har
bor Plywood Corp. of Riddle,
vice president; Herbert J. Cox,
ReeSe-Taylor Lumber company
secretary.
Last night, the delegates elect
ed the following 20 men to the
board of directors;
District one George Gray of
C and C Logging Co.; Bert Ross
Crown Zollerbach Corp.; Roy
Gould, Atlas Logging Co.
District two Jack Brand is.
Willamette Valley Lumber Co.;
J. M. Lebo, D. C. Johnson Lum
ber Co.
District three Al Smith of
Coos Bay Lumber Co.; Robert
Conklin of Weyerhaeuser; Wil
immmmi
Ends Today! Cont. Shows
Pat O'Krien
"EUillTIXH r.MIIER
IMNNE"
Jan Hall
"MICHIGAN KID"
TOMORROW!
Edward (i. Robinson
"NIGHT HAS 1,000 EYES"
Rarrv Eltrgcrald
"THE NAKED CITY"
CONT. EROM IF, M,
ENDS TODAY!
I'U-FEATl'RE!
Roy Acnff
"O. MY DARLING
CLEMENTINE"
WlailtTOiiesTcmigM! '
I Starts at Dusk
I RANDOLPH SCOTT
I Kl.l.A KAINKS
I "WALKING
I HILLS" I
I I Laurel H.inlv (1
"SW.-SSM.SS"
II COLOR CARTOON
l LATE NEWS
WMtM fit aOTT
trt Iltt0al3. Hlflil I
Capof Winner
In Preakness
Baltimore. May 14 i
Greentree stable's Capot gained
revenge today by setting a new
Plmlico track record in the
Preakness.
Capot, runner-up in the derby.
won a nose decision in a photo
over Isidor Biebers Palestinian.
The judges had to examine an
other photo before deciding
third place.
Crispin Oglebay's Noble Im
pulse was given the nod for
show money and Mrs. E. H. El
lison Jr's Sun Bahram got
fourth.
Calumet farm's Ponder, the
surprise derby winner, wound
up fifth when his attempt to
come from last place failed.
Capot's time of 1:58 for the
mile and three sixteenths cut
two-fifths of a second off the
previous mark set by Riverland
in 1943.
The race was run on a track
dampened by a light rain which
fell for 27 minutes before the
nine colts went to the post for
the 73rd running of the classic.
5 Year Old
Mother Well
Lima, Peru, May 14 W Lit
tle Gerardo Medina and the mo
ther who gave him birth when
she was only five years and eight
months old, celebrated his tenth
birthday today.
Medical science was amazed
when on Mother's Day, May 14,
1939 Dr. Gerardo Losada per
formed an operation delivering
a son from a mother not much
beyond babyhood herself.
Today they are sturdy, healthy
children, leading the normal,
poverty stricken lives of a mil
lion other on the wetsern Ande
an slopes.
The son's half-breed grandfa
ther has taught him to herd
goats, but the child also attends
the same school as his mother.
Lina Medina, now nearly 16
years old.
Lina now knows that the boy
is her son, and not a brother, as
she had at first been told. The
fred Laird of Grifee and Laird
Lumber Co.
District four Lou Reese of
Crown Zellerbach Corp.; Harry
Patton of Hammond Lumber Co.;
Robert Dwyer of Dwyer Lum
ber Co.
District five Vic Torrey of
Cascade Plywood Co.; Paul San
ders of Roaring River tree farm;
John Powers of Santiam Lumber
Co.
District six Faye Abrams of
Booth Kelly; A. D. McReynolds
of Giustina Bros. Lumber Co ;
Roy Bigson of Longbell Lumber
Co.
District seien Weldon Kline
of Harbor Plywood Corp.; Lee
Butler of Mist Logging Co.; Don
Whalen of Timber Products of
Medford.
I Mti i mit sucl1 a 'ove'y
I ilj $e y( the Bride-the Groom'"
I I . :tiimi!'-a: : ::: (;rC
i mrmitaa:- c t:;
(KilLW SMM
tr'
with Rita
boy, however, believes she Is his
sister.
Dr. Losada, who saved both
mother and son with a Cesarian
operation, is far from popular
with the children's grandparents.
He says they resent the fact he
overruled their desire to send
the children abroad for exhibi
tion, hoping to reap a fortune
from those who would pay to
see.
AirliffCosf
$190,077,000
Washington, May 14 ixt The
National military establishment
estimates the cost to the United
States of the Berlin airlift at
about $100,077,000.
This figure includes S181.307,
900 for the air phase carried on
by the air force and navy, and
$8,770,000 for the army, which
did the ground job.
A ENDS "Mother Is A Freshman" K
II TONIGHT and "ESCAPE" j
INtVY IUMUKKUW!
LADD makes history..
IN HIS FIRST BIG
WESTERN HITl
pap" 1 "Tht Plainsman"!
ivrW I 2ND HIT! I
JrAij ' The Crackdown I
"Greetings, Bait"
. ..UoneVmoon even Started .,' .
;i 1 1 lite m
Johnson Hattie Mc Daniel
Motion
"LET'S
Ford Rejects
Union Proposal
Detroit, May 14 ( The Ford
Motor company today rejected
the union proposal to settle the
strike of 63,000 Ford workers.
At the same time, the com
pany announced it was submit
ting a counter proposal to the
ClO-United Auto Workers.
The union proposal was made
yesterday by UAW President
Walter Reuther. He declared it
as "detailed and specific."
Earlier the federal govern
ment expressed concern at the
strikers' "grace consequences."
Mediation Director Cyrus S.
Ching said he would step in
unless the strike were settled
within a "reasonable period."
The federal mediation chief's
message arrived yesterday as the
UAW-CIO made a settlement
proposal in writing in the pro
duction speeds dispute.
Hit first in Technicolor . . .
filmed by Paramount with all
th bignost and thrills
of thtir "Union Pacific" and
iililimliitii
t tU JftUJVU W wum
"turn'
Gigi Perreau
EXTRA!
Pictures' Own True Story
GO TO THE MOVIES"
The union's 65,000 workers
at Ford Rogue and Lincoln-Mercury
went on strike on May S on
a charge of an unfair speed-up'
in the plants. The company de
nies this.
Reuther turned the UAW's
proposal over to John S. Bu
gas, head negotiator for the
company.
Afterwards Bugas said it was
the union's "first concert pro
posal." He asked time to study
it.
Blood Bank Topic
Hubbard Members of the
Hubbard Parent-Teachers asso
ciation will learn about the
blood bank at the Monday night
meeting at 8 o clock. New of
ficers will be installed by Mrs.
Leslie Morris. The program will
include a number given by the
Boy Scouts, a vocal solo and a
reading.
STARTING TOMORROW!
LIMITED ENGAGEMENT . . .
4 Days Only! State Theatre!
rZ4- Sun. s:30
L un-thru ws. 8fi,MP M if
All Seats Reserved!
Seats Now on Sale at
Grand Theatre!
Phone 3-3467 Matinee Daily from 1 P. M.
STARTS
sl&isK
an muwAYcnf locnuitT
HENRY HATHAWAY-
THRILL CO
1 v; --i
Truman Visitor
At Ball Grounds
Washington, May 14 ff
Baseball Fan Harry Truman paid
a surprise visit to Griffith sta
dium to Join in welcoming the
Washington Senators home from
their victorious road trip.
The president was a specta
tor at their game with the Bos
ton Red Sox.
It was the first home game of
the Senator! since they return-
ed from the west after winning
nine straight, losing their tenth
game on the trip.
Thcpresident invoked silence
on his trip to the park until af
ter he left his Blair house resi
dence, accompanied by seven of
ALL CRITICS AGREE.. .THERE HAS
NEVER BEEN A MOTION PICTURE
LIKE 'THE RED
WINNER
OF THREE
ACADEMY
AWARDS!
Color by TECHNICOLOR
MESENTEO Bf J. AtTHUl IANK
AN EAGIE UON FI1MS KltASE
u
o
0
e
n
TODAY!
, tup IVlr Dnrc-. : ' Of
IN THE GREATEST story of thS
EVER TO
- FEATURE!
his staff members.
Secretary Charles G. Ross said
Mr. Truman had a sudden no
tion to go, and wanted to at
tend as an ordinary citizen with
out any advance fanfare.
"If he can get by with it this
time, he may go out again,"
Ross said.
New
Woodburn
PIX
Theatre
Oregon
O-SO-EAST SEATS
ENDS SAT,
"Hills of Home"
Plus
"Shut My Big Mouth"
SUN.-MON.-TUES.
"The Three Musketeers"
SHOES"!
Mat. Sun. 1.20 1.50 - 1.80 (inc. tax.)
Eve. Sunday thru Wednesday
1.20 1.80 2.40 (inc. tax)
Students Anytime 1.00
OWL SHOW TONIGHT!
Complete Show
After 10:20 P. M.
ENGULF THE SCRE f
COLOR CARTOON
"KITTEN SITTER"
' FOX AIRMAIL NEWS!
RUSSIA DROPS BLOCKADE!
i
J