f Linn Playground Sked Announced 12 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Wednesday, June IS, 1949 'SQUEEZE' IS GONE IN DEALS Correspondent from Red Area in China Tells Story (Editor's Nolr: This l the flit rlispalrh from Spencer Moos a, Associated Press correspondent in Tripini, since th ancient Chinese capital was taken in January, Moosa is en route to Canton with his family.) By sri:xci:n moosa Fusan, Korea '0' Up to the time I left peiping lat ueek, the Chinese communists nad shown no sins of lif tins tlie ban against "ioreiyn correspondents. The ban was imposed Feb. 27. On that day 17 persons listed as foreign correspondents received a formal order forbidding them to gather or file news. It was signed by Gen. Yon Chien, head ot the communist military corn- Lebanon Plans for the city niitlee. recreational program for sum-! This action, the notification mer are now being made, an- said, was taken because Peiping nnunces City Recreation Dime- was a military area. Why it nad tor R. M. Barber. June 20 has not been taken four weeks been et as the opening day. earlier when the communists The program will be built first occupied Peiping was not around the Red Cross supervis- explained. ed swim activity to be held forj A letter to General Yeh ak two weeks at Waterloo, begin- jng him to say when the ban ning July 18. Recreational mihi be lifted went unanswer swimming will start two weeks ta. rated with a wall of silence, before and be continued for two correspondent began to leave weeks after the Red Cross pro-1 North China, and today only a gram, for those who already handtul alia are there. Wnetherj Know now io swim. i iney will be able to file news Softball leagues will be form- again is problematical, ed and plans are being made to have a playoff in three age I had known several enmmu groups with Albany, Salem, nist leaders during my five-year Sweet Home and Corvallis. A ! stay in wartime Chungking. One baseball clinic will be held for: of them was Gen. Chou en Lai. all hoys interested. I In Chungking he was always ac- Plavirrounds will be oDen to eessiuie lor interviews, fcven In all from the ages of 6 to Coplon "Confident" Judith Coplon and her attorney Archilbald Palmer examine photostatic copies of original FBI documents behind the 34 data slips allegedly found in Miss Coplon's purse which Judge Reeves ruled had to be introduced in her espionage trial. Miss Coplon said that she was "completely confident" of ultimate vindication. (Acme Telephoto). people who pay taxes are sure at the Horn home. A dessert 0 j the middle of the night, I always none Is illegally diverted. (luncheon was served to Mrs. with tournaments planned inwas received readily. Mor( iu,r,s , .u uU-im.u i.nni. nine nnno hadminion than once I was entertained at;mess dealings with the commu- er. Mrs. Mabel Hatch. Mrs. Lula H mh.r .nn. HanHirri.fi his home and was among his nist bureaus report the question Ruling Made On Dependents Men having dependents can now enlist in the army, provid ing they can be enlisted in one of the first four pay grades. That is the recent information received by the local army and air force recruiting station. Under present regulations men with previous service are per permitted to enlist with all or part of their grade hld at the time of discharge. Enlistment from civilan life can be made by persons with or without prior service in almost any branch or service in the army. Unlimited vacancies also exist in the air force. Under the present set-up with the Salem station a sub-station of the Portland office processing at the local office requires from 25 to 30 minutes. The men are then shipped to Portland for final processing and oath of en listment. Air force enlistees are sent to Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, and the army enlistees to Fort Ord, Calif. Men witn previous military service and possessing special military qualifications, such as mechanics, cooks, photograph ers, and several other jobs, may be assigned to a post, camp or station where vacancies exist, if they aesire. Teaching Arts Mrs. Marie Ring Erickson, of the arti de partment of the University of Louisiana, is teaching the arts courses at the OCE summer session which opened June 19 at Monmouth. Youths Charged With Pilfering Lebanon, June 15 City Do lice reported as solved this week, a series of three thefts covering the past 60 days which resulted I in the arrest of two minor youths, 14 and 16 years old. wno confessed to all three crimes. The youngest boy also admit ted participation in the Rod and Gun club break-in earlier thi year. I The older youth was involved in a recent theft of packaged nuts from the Northwest Nut Growers warehouse. Recent burglaries included the Shell Oil station last Tuesday night where cigarettes, cigars. candy and petty cash was taken; the Lebanon Meadows racing trarr thpft of ten cases of emp ty pop bottles and the ChanrA pion service station last Wednes day night, where they obtained merchandise and small eash. Lebanon Chief of Police Cliff Price, acting on a tip. secured ih aiH nr npoutv Sheriff Georse Miller in making the arrest. Both youths live outside the city. The pair were turned over to juvenile authorities in Albany to await a hearing. The older boy is currently on parole for his' part in the nut stealing. War Veteran III Silverton Weldon Hatteberg, veteran of World War II, it en tering the Portland Veteran's hospital facility for observation and possible surgery. He has been ill for several weeks. some of the acreage and some fields have been slow to start after spring plowing, but the re cent sultry days have given im petus and all fields give prom ise of good yield, growers report. Peppermint Crop in Harvest at Unionvale Unionvale Peppermint Is nroiecta. hobbies, auet Barnes, i nosis ai a LnungKing press hotel. and skills will be taught to all ln Peiping 1 wrote several in the above age levels. li tters to General Chou but ' incre was no reply. of "squeeze" never has entered Official receipts are given and no secret rebates are demanded. The North China hotel mana l f'T..h" ill Another man to whom I who rented hi. premise, to White, Mrs. Jessie Moyer and; thriving and hoeing is in pro- Mrs. Laura l'orn. Mrs. Jessie 'gress in the various farms in the Moyer was the invited guest This was their last meeting un til October. Grand Island and Unionvale dis tricts. About 50 per cent of the hoeing has been completed in Palmistry Readings Will tell your pi and future. Will nay iat present advise on love, marriage and business. Answers all questions. Are vou worried? Why be ln doubt? Special Readings. "mewl to io p.m. Moved from 466 Ferrv to 173 S. Commercial Journal Want Ads Pay PEAT MOSS CANADIAN HORTICULTURE GRADI PONY BALE LAWNS f) Qjf- FLOWER GARDENS - &JL1j BEDS THE COMPLETE FERTILIZER VIGORO A Balanced Food For Gordons and Flowers . 100 LBS $5.00 f II 2.4D" For Killing Lawn Weeds Complete Stock "2.4.5T" The New Brush and Blackberry Killer Now Available D. A. WHITE & SONS 265 Stote We Deliver Phono 2247S tf..as Am mnA Um nll.ne at K.nti-m .r.,U .Phnnl'. will Hp I dressed equally usfd. Robert Barber will ariminis- jwas lunK Pi kindiy-lookinc head of the North China people s I covrrnmpnt. In PhimtjUino h ter the city program. Working! tO0( nad been tne ,oui of aflabu; with him will be a woman to;.. iimiiuiv: iiMiiirx my ii i lb, iia mi iti hi ib and girl a play. Thii director has not yet been chosen appeals!1"6 communists said the whole aeai was open ana aoove Doara, "I have been in this country many years." he said, "and this was the first time no one asked for 'squeeze.' Other foreigners tell similar Farmers' Income L Drops 10 Per Cent Washinglon, June 15 The net income of farmers in the first half of JD4D, is probably running at least 10 per cent be low the same period last yea' the department of agriculture estimated today. Cash receipts from farm op erations and probably the gross Income of farmers, will be down only about seven per cent. But the experts estimated that farm ers production expenses haven't fallen as fast as their income so it will leave them less profit They aaid the cost of items the farmers have to buy is down only about three per cent. Tha report by the bureau of agricultural economics eslimat d tha farmers are receivlnR about $11,900,000,000 from mar ketings this year, compared with $12,800,000,000 in the first fix months of 1B48. Farmers old more than they did in the first six months of 1948 but prices wera down about 10 per cent. Receipts from livestock were stimated at around J7.400.000, 000, ten per rant less than In the first half of 1P48, and crop re eelpla wera estimated at $4,500. 000,000, threa per cent more than in 148. Glannini Leaves $480,000 Estate Kadwond City, Calif., June 18 lum A. f. Olannlnl. fonnd-r-chalrman of the multi-hilllon dollar Bank of America who died June 1, left a personal estate of leas than $480,000, accord ing to hi will filed for probate here Tho document bora out Oian ninl't oft -repeated statement that '1 never had the money itch ... I have no intention of dying a millionaire." All but $0,000 of the oslale will fo for charitable or bene flrlent purposes. His son, L. M. Glannini, and daughter, Claire Glannini Hoffman, do not ahare In the estate but both are named executors with th bank. Approximately $430,000 Is $len to tha Bank of Amerira Glanninl Foundation which pro vides funds for educational, med ical and social research aids. Other beneficiaries Include public aharltiea, playgrounds. Catholic, Jewish and Protestant charities, a boy a club, and nine Individual $1,000 grants to near relatives and en employee. UnionvaU Considers School Improvements Vntnnvale The newlv elrrt ed Unionvale school board. Henry Deyoe, Hoyal Hihh and Howard Stelngrube, held their first board meeting at th Unionvale school building In conference with Charles Ser geant, local contractor. They will meet the stale edu cational board at Salem relative to Improving or building the Unionvale schoolhouae before th start of th 1P4 -.10 term of school, Mrs. Arl Launer, the , rhsol dark reported, In PeiDinfl not a sintrlp rnr. respondent was able to see the ,,orles ancl are incredulous. Red official. ' Permission was granted read- Fa" City Mrs. Laura Horn ily to correspondents wishing to nd Mrs. J. B. Strauss were leave. Correspondents' only channel of communication was the alien affairs office at police headquarters. Manned apparently bv iuninr clerks, this office was the only point of contact In Peiping be tween the communists and for eigners. My dealings with it were con cerned with efforts to get a per mit lor my car and finally per mission to leave North China. A permit for my car was de nied, always on the grounds no instructions had been received from the military control com mittee. But my application for approval to leave North China was obtained quickly. It was safe to conclude that the communists were glad to see the correspondents m tnH.n.. ' dent reporting in North China was a ining of the past. The communists came into the great cities of Peiping and Tl. enlsin not as "carnctbaszers" hut with determined plans to break the graft and of the past. Even foreigners opposed In communism concede Red lead ers have displayed none of the get-rlch-qulck tendencies of pre- ....... xniqurrnrs. iney are con vinced, too, that these leaders would take slern action against any of their own number who might be found succumbing to the lure of easy wealth. However, foreigners believe the communists will have an up hill battle to eliminate graft. It generally was agreed that the day of high officials' openly amassing immense private for tunes by graft are over. Most hostesses for the Ladies Art club FULL-COLOR SNAPSHOTS Are Easy To Take With Kodacolor Film And Your Camera Most any roll-film cam era without any extras loaded with Kodacolor Film, will make snapshots in full-color. Stop in now and get Kodacolor Film in the right size for your camera. Ladies Heel Lifts FOR SPIKE AND SMALL CUBAN HEELS LEATHER A fk THURSDAY 0R I TM AND friday COMPOSITION I V ONLY Fast While-U-Wait or Shop Service SHOE REPAIR DOWNSTAIRS ATTENTION FARMERS The Oregon Mutual First Insurance Co., of McMinnville, have had special low fire insur ance rates for farmers since 1894. Be sure to see us before renewing your next Farm Policy. Ask us also about Farm Liability Insurance It is a MUST Coverage for Farmers Scellars, Foley & Rising, Inc. A Profrcssive 143 South Liberty Street Office Telephone 2-4143 7 . CQ"tHC'AL U "mm, $100to$1000s.-o Aut r Personal 'COAlAlERCIAti CREDIT PLAJtf 41 N. Church t Ph. 1-411$ I ii-f J I o I fJS? ' ',"' I i. tin '' I . '3.30 V $2.io 1 s 'rfllk. PINT tDolutn lll.KMir.l) WHISKEY UNDID WHISMY It PSOOf 70H OISIN NtUTl SMIIS JOSISH PINCH 4 CO. 4UD0IN, PA. -HISTORIC MEDICAL HIGHLIGHTS No. 38- -DANGER! WATCH YOUR STEP- f GREAT Vance In the treatment of can cer wat to be e major result of Maria Curia'i discovery af now element named Radium . . . first announced in 1898. Her discovery stemmed from arifinal rataarch required for a university df ree , . . ended in one of the treat ditcovoria af all tima. It took Maria and kar husband Piarra four yeart of paim takinf labor ta actually rafine a small amount af pura radium, with tuccoss finally achieved In 1902, Since, radium and its goi by-product radon, hat cama into extensive use in treat ment of deadly cancer. TMI oimiNTfSir roiMfi tireicsi crNTi ipsncm optrati s cm' I Something new has been added . . . IT'S THE eer? n w7 n rn Off" ww w n ii 1 wi i U U U UJ Lzs U U AT M. K. N. HERE'S HOW IT WORKS: This special "SAVINGS WINDOW" wat mod especially for our dollar-wit friends. Any merchandise in the store that is not sold in 90 DAYS is put in our special "SAVINGS WIN DOW." And, any merchondisa found in this window, regardless of original price, is sold for 13 OFF. When one piece is sold, another will move in and take its place. The SAVINGS WINDOW is the window to the right of tha Philco Appliance display. Drive over and watch this window frequently ... it will be changing all of tha tima . . . this if your big opportunity! Off "i3S3SPijiii s '-e. n iiii' - Ft ';tsr '-zr Drive Over and Realize These Savings! FOR EXAMPLE: V, OFF Davenport & Chair $1 9730 Reg. Price $295.95 I OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9:00 M.K.N. FURNITURE 1425 Edgewater St., in West Salem (On Salem-Dallas Highway) Phone 2-5456 Phone 2-4413 FREE PARKING FREE DELIVERY ( i J