Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, June 21, 1949, Page 2, Image 2

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    1 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. Tuesday, June 21. 1949
Typhoon Kills
600 in Japan
Tokyo. June 21 VP) A ty
phoon left an estimated 600 Jap
anese dead or missing in south
ern Japan yesterday. After
raking the southwest tip of pop
ulous Honshu it swept out to sea
today.
The storm struck first in
Okinawa, the big U.S. air base.
No American casualties were re
ported there. Gusts up to 115
miles an hour were recorded
on Okinawa.
From there the typhoon blew
on north to the southern Japan
ese Island of Kyushu, where by
police account most of the cas
ualties occurred. Police put the
dead at 40 and the number of
missing at S63.
The typhoon then hit Japan's
Inland sea, causing heavy dam
age to coastal shipping, drove
across the tip of Honshu and
moved out into the Sea of Japan,
between Japan and Korea.
Unless it departs from the
usual courses of typhoons, the
storm will hit the Asiatic main
land. An additional SS fishing craft
were destroyed on Shikoku and
"scores" of others on Hiroshima
and Yamaguchl prefectures, JIJi
Press said.
Hong Kong port authorities
picked up an SOS signal from
the 8391-ton American freighter
Lightning, now adrift off Okin
awa. Pacific Far East Lines,
owners of the vessel, said the
ship left Hong Kong June 16
with a cargo of Siamese jungle
beasts, including eight ele
phants, 700 monkeys, 12 bears,
and a dozen snakes over 20 feet
in length.
The Japanese Marine Trans-
port association said two other
freighters were grounded by the
storm off Kyushu.
Police reported 40 persons
were killed and 363 others were
missing in Kyushu, Shikoku and
Chugoku.
Government officials estimat
ed damage from the typhoon
nicknamed "Delia" by the U.S
typhoon warning network at
$12,300,000.
Beaver Trapping
Program Legal
The state game commission's
program of trapping destructive
beaver and selling their pelts
was uphold today by the state
supreme court, I
Ed Fields and six other Union
county residents sued the com
mission In an effort to have the
trapping program declared Ille
gal. Circuit Judge R. J. Green of,
Union county ruled the program
is legal, and today's decision by
Chief Justice Hall S. Lusk
agreed with him.
Other court action today:
DlRbirrM) WW B. Yttj. Portlmd !
torncy, on flvt etitrtu of unprofeMlonftl
conduct brought by th board of kov
trnora of tint Oron atatt bar. Th
charts Included uii of client' mom lor
hi own uat.
1 RuIkJ In a. Clack am a count r that
B. Raven, ft loaiina truck eotl tract car
tier, ha to par $1,000 damaie for ft fa
tal auto accident, arvd that tha two eom-
Eantaa for which ht haulsd lot ar not to
am. Thraa com pan la are Crown Zl
lerbacb and Wryrrhatuaer Timber com
panla. Hubert J. Peraoru waa killed when
til car collided with Raven' truck, which
tailed to atop. Circuit Judge larl C
Latou'-ette held that the dmuu ahould
b aaiaaaed aialrut Raven and tha two
companle. but today' dectalon by Jua
lira Arthur D. Hay ruled that Raven wa
tolely renpon1b1e.
Upheld a Lane eountr dectalon tlvlm
Ih 000 damatea to H, P. Be vary in hi ault
ealiut Arthur Mvrmo. Car driven by
the two men collided at Florence. Tha de
cision by Jiutlce Hay upheld Circuit Judca
C r. BRipworth of Lane county.
Reveraed ft Lane county dectalon In
nil to et aalde ft deed. The cam w
brouaht by M. K. Ivan and other etetrut
Mr. and Mr. Henry Anderaon. The low
ar court ruled In favor of Ban. bir
O. Bailey
Friday Pet Day on
City Playgrounds
The first of a series of seven
special days held annually in
connection with the city-school
recreation program Is slated for
Friday of this week. It will be
known as "Pet Day," and young
sters will present a wide variety
of nets for consideration.
The other special events, ac
cording to a list prepared by
Vernon Gilmore, director of rec-
DRIVING DOWN!
to
THRILLING
Satan's
HELL DRIVERS
AT HOLLYWOOD BOWL
FRIDAY, JUNE 248 P. M.
Sponsored by Salem Police
Aerial Patrol
reation, will include: Doll day,
July 8; Dress Up day, July 22;
Swimming Meet, August 5; Par
ade day, August 12; Hobby
Horse day, August 19, and clos
ing picnic and exhibitions, Au
gust 26.
A full program of recreation
and instruction is being carried
out at the various neighbor
hood schools. Capable instruc
tors are In charge at each place.
Doomed Child
At Burial Rites
Laurel, Miss., June 21 VP)
Eight-year-old Billy Anderson,
stricken by lukemia, watched
quietly the burial service of his
sister Betty Joyce, also victim
of the blood destroying disease.
Then he said to his mother:
"I don't want to go to New Or
leans for treatment again. It
didn't do Betty Joyce any good
and it won't me, either."
The parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Glaze Anderson, took the chil
dren to specialists in New Or
leans three weeks ago.
The specialists said neither
child could live long. Billy's
case of lukemia was more ad
vanced than Betty Joyce's.
, The five-year-old girl died
Saturday and was burled yester
day. Billy, older and stronger,
still withstands the ravages of
the disease, but without hope.
The Andersons have a third
child Rose Marie, nine months
old.
Killer of Coed
Gets 80 Years
Boulder, Colo., June 21 VP)
Joe Sam Walker, 33, was sen
tenced yesterday to serve 80
years to life in prison for the
"violent, vicious, atrocious"
murder of Theresa Foster, Colo
rado university coed.
District Judge George H.
Bradfield passed the second de
gree murder sentence with the
observation that "I find no ex
tenuating circumstances in the
case." He added that "the pun
ishment should fit the crime'
which he described as "a vio
lent, vicious, atrocious murder."
Walker was visibly shaken by
the stiff penalty. If he earned
time off for good behavior
Walker could serve the sentence
in 40 years.
District Attorney Marc E. H.
Smith had recommended before
the sentence was ordered that
Walker "should be 72 years old
before he is released."
"We're going to the supreme
court, Defense Attorney James
Burke announced after Walker
was taken back to his Boulder
county jail cell. The attorneys
were granted a 30 day stay of
execution and 60 days in which
to file a bill of exceptions chal
lenging legal points in the trial
A Jury of 11 men and a wom
an convicted Walker May 9 of
killing the 18-year-old freshman
from Greeley, Colo. Her raped
half-nude body was found last
Nov. 11 under a bridge south of
Boulder, two days after she dis-
appeared only a walk from the
university campus to her resi
dence. Belgian Liner
Sunk by Mine
Dunkerque, France, June 21
(U.R) The Belgian channel
steamer Princess Astrid, carry
ing 283 persons, struck a mine
and sank off Dunquerque today.
police said six persons were
missing and eight injured.
The first radio message from a
rescue fleet which rushed to the
area five miles off Dunquerque
said some of those abroad the
Astrid had been burned by the
blast. Port authorities alerted
Dunquerque hospitals to be
ready to receive the injured
The 2.950-ton vessel struck
the mine in coastal waters dur
ing ner regular afternoon run
from Ostend, Belgium, to Dover
England. Port officials said the
Astrid, carrying 218 passengers
and 6S crewmen, sank 90 min
utes later.
see the
Big 4 Finish
Paris Debate
Paris. June 21 W The Big
Four foreign ministers ended
four weeks debate last night
with a pledge for east-west
peace and general agreement
on an . Austrian independence
treaty.
As the conference closed, the
following results were announc
ed: A six-point statement of prin
ciples to guide negotiations in
Germany. This featured a Rus
sian promise not to reimpose a
blockade of Berlin, in return for
efforts to revive east-west trade
in the former reich.
A Joint communique announc
ing a series of agreements on the
outstanding issues in the Aus
trian treaty and instructing the
deputies to wrap up the docu
ment by September 1.
Agreement among the four
ministers to maintain contact
nd hold another meeting in
New York next fall during the
United Nations general assem
bly. An American deputy, Samuel
Reber, told newsmen he was
confident the four powers would
agree of an Austrian text In time
for the fall session, when it pre
sumably would be adopted and
the allies would pull their forces
out of Austria.
The conference had a hectic
ending when Russia sought un
successfully to make a last-min
ute change in the Big Four's
communique.
It seemed Vlshinsky had been
reprimanded by Moscow for one
point on the Austrian treaty re
garding oil profits.
School Book
Probe Dropoed
Washington, June 21 VP) A
projected congressional probe of
school books appeared today to
have backfired into a house Un
American activities committee
wastebasket.
Republican committee mem
bers denounced it yesterday and
democrats followed through to
day with a prediction that the
committee will drop it like a hot
potato.
It appeared likely that any in
vestigation made now will be by
special commission of noted
educators, possibly headed by
General Dwight D. Eisenhower,
president of Columbia univer
sity.
Committee Chairman Wood
(D., Ga.) said he was at a loss
to "know what all the shooting
about" and insisted that the
committee is not investigating
textbooks.
"Purely preliminary steps.'
he told newsmen, have been talc-
by committee investigators
as a result of complaints by the
Sons of the American Revolution.
These complaints, he said, made
some very grave charges" in
volving communism in schools.
I think," Wood said, "that
the educators themselves would
be interested in refuting the
charges if they are not true."
The three active republican
members of the committee
agreed that the educators them
selves should make the study.
irecrackers Cost
Silverfon Man $25
A Silverton resident, Jack An
derson Lowrey, posted $25 ball
on a charge of illegal shooting of
firecrackers in Salem, a police
report stated Tuesday.
Lowrey was nabbed by an of
ficer after he was seen to toss
firecracker from a car at the
Intersection of Silverton and
Portland roads.
His arrest was the first on that
charge for this year. Shooting
of fireworks is limited to July 3,
4, S and prohibited in the down
town area.
Some snakes ran go three
years without food because of
their low energy requirements
for simple body maintenance.
Free Free Free Free Free
Come One Come All
TO THE
Free Hobby Show
SALEM
CHERRY CITY MODEL AIRCRAFT
21st and Market
June 2) (en day only) 1 2 to 9 P. M.
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Zoo 'Tea Party' Sally holds her mug for more milk as
the chimpanzees in the London zoo hold their spring "tea
party." In rear is Compo, Susan Is in front and So-So at right.
Boy Slaying
Cougar Killed
Vancouver,
B.C., June 21 OJ.B
The vicious
which killed
80-pound cougar
a small Indian boy
Sunday was
treed by trained
dogs and shot yesterday
predatory hunter.
by a
Skate Hames of the game de
partment blasted the animal out
of a tree with one shot a quarter
of a mile from where it mauled
seven-year-old Dominic Taylor,
The boy was playing on the
beach with his father when he
suddenly was attacked by the
cougar. Two men drove the
animal off after the boy was
fatally injured.
The killer was brought down
an hour and a half after seven
trained cougar dogs and three
hunters were flown to the area
from Bamfield, .120 miles south
on the west coast of Vancouver
Island.
Pilot Hugh Hughes said the
heartbroken father, Dominic
Senior, led the hunters to the
scene where the cougar had at
tacked his son. A pair of over-
alls, ripped off by the cat, had
been left on the beach.
Hughes said the dogs picked
up the scent and had the cougar
treed within five minutes. It
was about 100 feet up in a big
hemlock," Hughes said. "The
foliage was so thick that Skate
Hames had to climb SO feet up a
nearby tree. He bagged the
cougar with one shot."
Jaycees Improving
Bush Pasture Park
A Junior Chamber of Com
merce work party is scheduled
to continue improving a section
of Bush pasture Thursday night.
The group is expected to meet
at 7 p.m. for the evening work.
Thus far, brush has been
cleared from about an acre of
the pasture along Pringle creek,
and several picnic tables have
been installed.
Next Tuesday night, a regular
meeting of the organization and
a board of control session will
be held at the pasture to con
tinue work. A picnic lunch has
been planned.
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New
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PIX
Theatre
Oregon
O-SO-EASI SEATS
ENDS TODAY
June 20-21
THE PALE FACE
(in color)
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Mrt IM 1 bate
Gandhi Slayers
To Face Death
Simla, India, June 21 VP) An
East Punjab high court today
confirmed a death sentence
against two Hindu journalists
tor the slaying of Mohandas K.
Gandhi.
The court confirmed a New
Delhi court's death penalty
against Narayan V. Godse and
Narayan B. Apte and sentences
of life imprisonment for Vish
nu Karkare and Madan Lai, in
connection with the crime.
The Punjab court reversed
the Delhi tribunal's Judgment in
the case of three other defend
ants in the case, however, they
acquitted Dattraya Parchure and
Kistayya Shankar, both of whom
had been sentenced to life.
The court recommended clem
ency for Gopal Godse, brother
of the chief defendant, who had
received life.
Gandhi, frail Hindu spiritual
leader, was shot Jan. 30, 1948,
as he walked to prayer in the
gardens of the Blrla mansion in
New Delhi.
Some primitive mammals
neither shiver nor perspire and
lack adequate internal tempera
ture control.
EN OS T
Jeanelic MacUonald, Llovd Nolan
Claude jmrman, Jr.
and Lassia
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State AFL lor
T-H Law Repeal
Eugene, June 21 W One
thing is clear In the State Fed
eration of Labor convention
here delegates are in no mood
for compromise on repeal of the
Taft-Hartley act.
They overrode their own of
ficials as the convention opened
yesterday, and voted to ask the
Oregon congressional delegation
to work for outright repeal.
The vote 'ignored an appeal
from James T. Marr, secretary-
treasurer of the federation, to
wait until after a speech Thurs
day by Joseph Keenan, Wash
ington, DC, political education
director. Marr said he under
stood national AFL leaders now
are willing to accept some
amendments on the act.
The delegates heard President
J. D. McDonald urge them yes
terday to undertake labor sales
manship by joining civic activi
ties and exchanging delegates
with other organizations so that
the general public can hear the
labor viewpoint.
"We have a selling Job to do,
and every member is a potential
salesman, McDonald said.
He also advocated an immedi
ate start in preparing for the
1950 election, asserting that la
bor's efforts so far have "only
scratched the surface."
Delegates also heard Ed Wes
ton, president of the Washing
ton State Federation of Labor,
assert that labor elected two of
three justices to the Washington
supreme court at the last elec
tion. This has resulted in more
liberal decisions since, he said,
Catholic Bishop
Arrested by Reds
Vatican City, June 21 (IP)
Communists in Russian-occupied
North Korea have arrest
ed a Roman Catholic bishop and
more than 40 other church per
Hurry Last Day!
1M9' StirnrUr Musical!
'MY DREAM IS
YOURS' fc 'JIGSAW
TOMORROW!
All NEWrH
Thrills! ft
Younger
Brothers
STi TeChnicoior
Itifyi BENNETT
"HIDE-OUT"
"Basketball Read linen"
sonalities, an Informed Vatican
source said today.
Most of those arrested are
now imprisoned at wonsan,
Korea, Vatican circles were
quoted as saying.
Cherry Royally
Appears Friday
An outstanding public ap
pearance of Queen Patricia and
her court before the Cherryland'
festival dates arrive will be
Friday night of this week at the
auto races at Hollywood Bowl.
Queen Patricia and the four
princesses will appear on the
grounds, probably in two cars,
accompanied by members of the
Cherrians. Also in one of the
cars will be Mayor Robert L.
Elfstrom and Mrs. Elfstrom.
The races, under the name of
"Satan's Hell Divers," are
series of thrills on the bowl
track, and proceeds will be a
benefit toward purchase of an
airplane for police emergency or
disaster use. The event is spon
sored by the Salem police aerial
patrol.
Another phase of the show
will be put on by members of
the Salem Motorcycle club. The
Hell Divers have been a big
drawing card wherever they
have appeared.
With only a little over two
weeks left before the opening
of Salem's 1949 Cherryland Fes
tival Queen Patricia O Connor
and her princesses are finding
their time well filled with royal
demands.
Monday the court was In town
to have pictures taken at vari
ous places and Tuesday noon
they were guests at the Lions
club luncheon.
Both Wednesday and Thurs
day of this week they will also
attend luncheon meetings of
service clubs and Sunday after
noon the quintet is to be hon
ored at a tea given by members
of Zontas at the home of Mayor
and Mrs. Elfstrom.
14'h ANNUAL
ST. PAUL
RODEO
JULY 2-3-4
ST. PAUL, ORE.
Thrili e Splits!
Dancing Nightly!
$7,000 Hill M0NIT
Top Cowhand's
Tickets Now on Sal
STEVENS It SON
2 Arraigned for
$1300 Forgeries
Portland, June-21 VP) A sec
ond man will be arraigned here
today on a charge of cashing
$1300 in forged checks, made out
to the Columbia River Paper
Mills.
George James Acor, SB, ar
rested in Spokane, pleaded guil
ty here. George House, 35. ar
rested in Independence, Kans.,
will face the same charge today.
J. S. Bailey, deputy district
attorney, said Acor formerly
worked for the company as a
janitor. He said some 20 checks
were cashed before the company
noticed the Oregon Pulp & Pa
per officials' names were ap
pearing on Vancouver branch
checks. An investigation then
disclosed the forgeries, he said.
Acor, it was reported here at
the time the forgeries were dis
covered, used the names of K.
W. Heinlein, manager of the Sa
lem plant of the Oregon Pulp
& Paper company, and D. A.
Armstrong, mill superintendent,
who has since died. Acor was not
employed in Salem.
Ends Tonlfht!
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My Own True Loe"
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rlred MacMuiT
Maddeine Carroll
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Bart Lancaster
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Franchot Tone
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TRAIL OF VIGILANTES'
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Roy Rogers Color
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