2 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Wednesday, August 3, 1949 Bulb Gardens Hearing Ends The state agriculture depart ments two-day hearing about the Sherwood bulb gardens end ed last midnight, and the de partment's order is expected in a few weeks. , The department charged the gardens one of the northwest's biggest bulb sellers with fraud deception and misrepresentation and ordered the hearing of L. E. Marcus, owner of the gardens could defend himself. The de partment wants to refuse to re new his nursery license. Marcus testified last night that when the department ordered the hearing, his business shrank so much that it caused him sen oils financial difficulties. But on cross-examiation, he admitted he had been in finan cial deep water before the hear ing was ordered. Marcus said he had conferred with a referee in bankruptcy, but he denied he had been under pressure from his creditors. Parents See School Pageant Monmouth, Aug. 3 More than 450 parents and interested spec tators attended a pageant en titled "Still the Camp Fire Burns" presented by the pupils of the Campus elementary school held Tuesday night at the Oregon College of Education here. . The program brought to end the work of the summer session of the elementary school. Each group at the school planned and wrote each section of the pa geant. The first scene was "Hiawa tha's Childhood" illustrating In dian life in the Oregon country before the coming of the white man. The second section was "The White Man" showing the arrival of a group of pioneers to this country after an epic trip over the old Oregon trail. The final section "Monmouth Campus" brought the picture up to date showing modern day school children enjoying a mod ern recreational program. Miss Henrietta Wolfer, prin cipal of the school, was in gen eral charge. Scovell Arrested For Bus Smash-up Art Scovell of Portland, one Of the drivers involved in a smashup with a City Transit Lines bus at the intersection of State and 12th streets in Salem on the weekend was under a charge of traffic violation Wed nesday. Released from a hospital where he had been taken for treatment of cuts and a broken left arm, Scovell reported to the Salem police headquarters Tues day to file an accident report. At that time he was placed un der arrest on a charge of failing to observe a stop sign. The charge was contained in a mu nicipal court warrant. Scovell was released on $25 ball on the traffic charge which was lodg ed against him as a result of the accident. Capitol Planning Meeting The capitol planning commis sion met here today with the state highway commission to discuss plans for the highway commission's proposed $2,000, 000 office building. It will be , constructed in the capitol group. immediately north of the new state office building. NOW! 2 Top Thrill Hits! "THE MUTINEERS" With Jon Hall and Robert Ryan James Mason In "CAUGHT" STARTS TODAY - Open 6:45 w a ft. SECOND BIG FEATURE "STREET WITH NO NAME" Mark Stevens, Bartmra Lawrence 1 r LATE SPORTS NATIONAL Brooklyn 201 010 32110 11 Pittsburgh ...000 000 401 5 a Erskine and Campanella; Riddle, uumoert (8) ana Mcuuuougn, Masi (8). New York ....000 000 2204 8 1 Chicago 000 001 0001 6 0 Koslo and R. Mueller; Rush, Hacker (8), Muncrtef (8), Kush (9i and Owen. AMERICAN St. Louis 000 000 1203 7 1 Boston 000 0O4 60x 9 15 0 Ostrowski, Kennedy (6i, Wine garner (7), Papal 7) and Lollar; Kinder and Tebbets. Klamath Falls Woman Chosen Mrs. Lillian Otlerbein of Klamath Falls was named pre sident of the 8 et 40 organiza tion for the stale of Oregon at an election conducted by the group during their convention Tuesday. The 8 et 40 is the honor society of the American Legion women's auxiliary.' The new president was in stalled at ceremonies in the mir ror room of the Marion hotel Tuesday night. Other newly-installed officers are Gretchen Robins, Junction City, first vice-president; Marie Tatom of Portland, second vice president; Eva Stewart, Leb anon, historian; Florence Dic key, Portland, chaplain; Thelma Andresen, Salem, sergeant-at- arms. Ask for Details On 5 Percenters Washington, Aug. 3 UP) A house armed services subcom mittee voted today to ask army secretary Gordon Gray for in formation on any five percent ers who may have been connect ed with the military uniform 1 business, Rep. Hebert (D-La.) told re porters Gray will be heard to morrow behind closed doors. Stanley J. Cummings, execu tive secretary of the National Association of Uniform Manufac turers, Inc., was due to testify today. Hebert said the subcom mittee has been unable to get In touch with him. Cummings is on a vacation, Hebert said, and is not expected back at his Brooklyn, N. Y., home until Aug. 15. The subcom mittee will decide after talking to Gray whether it then wants to question Cummings. Hebert said Cummings told him personally three weeks ago of having been approached by James V. Hunt, a former army quartermaster colonel, in con nection with a pending army or der relating to the manufacture of officers' uniforms. WELCOME! AMERICAN LEGION! Ph. 3-3721 STARTS ADULTS ONLY! NO 1 J rAA l uver i juu mare Needed in Beans Recent hot weather has brought on the bean crop faster than expected with the result that several western Oregon areas suddenly are reporting shortages of pickers to the Ore gon state employment service. More than 1,500 additional workers can find work In the bean fields during the peak period between now and Au gust 20, the employment serv ice says. Main shortages report ed are from the Albany local office, where 750 more pickers can be used, and from Salem, which has put in call for 600 additional persons. Eugene and Hillsboro offices also need a hundred or more workers, while McMinnville, Oregon City and Portland re ported a close balance between the supply and demand. All prospective pickers should have their own camping and cooking equipment, but some accommodations are available on farms.' Bean harvest will last well into September in some sections, but the main part of the crop will be gathered this month. This is the first farm labor shortage reported in Oregon since the cherries and berries were picked late in June. Summer Institute At Blind School All mothers of pre-school blind children are invited to a summer institute to be held at the state blind school beginning Wednesday. It will last a week. Walter R. Dry, superintendent of the school, said it is the first ever held in Oregon for moth ers of blind children. Its purpose is to enable the mothers to train their children so they will be able to begin normal school work when they are six years old. Speakers at the institute will include officials of the state de partment of education, blind school teachers, and several from blind schools of other states. Reclamation Group President Speaks A good audience is expected at the Chamber of Commerce Wednesday afternoon for Harry E. Polk, president of the West ern Reclamation association who will give the inside story ot water legislation in Washing ton. Polk is publisher of the Her ald at Wliliston, N. Dak. As pre sident of the reclamation asso ciation he succeeded Robert W. Sawyer of Bend. Polk travels in his private plane. Thursday noon he. will speak at Medford and in the evening at Prineville. Friday noon he will be at Caldwell. Opens 6:45 P.M. TODAY ADVANCE IN PRICES! 1V Judy Garland's great Technicolor musical, "The Wizard of Oz," returns to the Elsinore screen today as an M-G-M master piece reprint. This scene shows Judy, as Dorothy, and danc ing Ray Bolger as the scarecrow, with the ace cast also featur-' ing Frank Morgan, Bert Lahr and Jack Haley. Disease Still Serious Menace Many farmers may be acquir ing a false sense of security over the threat of Newcastle disease to their poultry flocks, veterin ary authorities say. "This disease has now spread to every state in the Union, and although there is less talk about it today than thete was several years ago, the losses it causes are very heavy," the American Foundation for Animal Health reports. "Newcastle disease is second only to pullorum disease in the economic loss it now causes the poultry Industry." Vaccines recently developed through veterinary research are proving helpful in controlling the disease, the Foundation said, but vaccination should be consider ed as an aid to, not a substitute for, strict control measures. If Newcastle disease appears in a flock, all dead birds should be burned or buried, and suscept ible birds should not be brought to the farm until four weeks or more after the outbreak. Farm ers should also take precautions to be sure birds are obtained from sources free of the disease. "If a flock-owner lives in an area where Newcastle disease has not yet become a serious problem, he should undertake vaccination only on the advice of his veterinarian," the Founda tion said. Idaho, Saturday noon at Poca tello, Saturday evening at Idaho Falls and later the same eve ning will address a general meeting at the same place. Welcome! American Legion1 Mat. Daily From 1 p.m. NOW! THRILLING! in linn . , ?js moa, iotci traf j ACTION CO-HIT! SCOOP! Eddie Dean IN PERSON Friday-9 p.m. NOW! OPENS 6:45 p.m. urn Lulnbe 11 & Scotty SWING YOUR PARTNER w Tote&ThruSat! ! j' tm FrM Shetland Pnny I Rldrf lor ib. Kid- I 1 M dlri fllirtlni Dally I II Gregory Peck II I I Ann Baxter I j J I Richard Widmark I L III "YELLOW SKY" III III Kirk Douglas ill III Marilyn Maxwell I "CHAMPION" ill I vru; !ioii i IN1!Ik Valley Jj?ri 1st- i rV Legion Removes Fire Risk in Shavings To comply with fire regula tions it was necessary for the American Legion convention or ganization to make hasty remov al of pine shavings with which they had covered the floors of "dugouts" in two downtown lo cations. The shavings were used in stead of sawdust. In one loca tion floor space in the base ment and on the first floor had been covered, and in another the basement floor. The owner of one of the buildings called the attention of Fire Chief W P. Roble to the situation. After an inspection he requested that the shavings be removed, which was done without opposition. The pine shavings, said the chief, would have been a serious hazard. New Form Issued For Withholding Tax A new form of withholding tax statements will be furnish ed to employers in the future by the state tax commission according to Ray Smith, com missioner in charge of the in come tax division. In addition to the informa tion contained on the form here tofore used, the new form will carry a number to identify each employer. When the forms are mailed out, the envelope will carry a notice calling attention to the change in form. TODAY!- ( !SI m i pis- r1,'' ' Jack ffY'"" I FUN FILLED COMPANION HIT! tA CLOUDBURST Of COMiPY . . . MP KISSES! 4 m,o, "j EXTRA! COLOR CARTOON RIOT WARNER "SUFFERING CATS" NEWS Tunis W. Creech, Druggist Dies Salem relatives Tuesday night received word of the death at a hospital in Detroit, Michigan, that day of Tunis W. Creech, 68, retired Salem druggist. Creech, who with Mrs. Creech had been visiting in Michigan, died from a cerebral hemorrhage, suffered two weeks ago. Creech for many years before his retirement operated the Cieech Pharmacy at State and 12th streets. He and Mrs. Creech left Salem in April for an ex tended trip that took them to the east coast and were to have left Detroit for Salem the day before he was stricken with the .cere bral hemorrhage. He was born at Pine River, Mich., November 21, 1880, and October 29, 1906, was married to Eula Shear at Muskegon, Mich. The Creechs came to Salem in 1913. " Two children preceded Mr Creech in death. A son, John was killed in a plane crash in Ethiopia in 1947, while serving with the U.S. army as a para trooper, and a daughter, Julia, died in 1931. Surviving besides his wife are two brothers, Warren Creech of Salem and Fred Creech of Alma, Mich.; and several nieces and nephews, including Mrs. Ina belle Walker and Mrs. Ua Mae Raeta, both of Salem. Announcement of services will be made later by the Clough-Barrick chapel, 5 Years Prison for Corvallis Escapees Albuquerque,' N. M., Aug. 3 W) Two men involved in the Benton county jail break at Corvallis, Ore., last June were under five-year sentences to day. Robert H. Brown (alias Mar shall Huff), who was "sprung" from the jail, and William Wood man (alias Billy Haynes), who helped do the "springing," were sentenced in federal court here. They both pleaded guilty to violation of the federal auto theft act, saying they stole a car at Murray, Utah, after the jail break and drove it' into the mountains near here. Bandit Robs Grocer Portland, Aug. 3 W) A young bandit walked into a grocery store today just as proprietor TONIGHT Autie Goodman Trio CLUB COMBO No Cover Charge Henry A. Hays was counting up his cash for banking. "I'll take that," said the bandit, flourish ing an automatic pistol. He grab bed the money and drove off down the street. Nab Mexican Jail Breakers Morelia, Mexico, Aug. 3 W) Most of the 72 prisoners battl ing police in a mass jail break surrendered early today after an all-night siege. Six prisoners were killed in the fighting and eight captured, police headquarters said. One policeman was reported dead and two wounded. The escaped prisoners, armed with rifles, sidearms and other weapons from the jail, were sur rounded on a small hill outside the city. Police dug in around the hill for an all-night battle. The prisoners broke out of jail shortly before nightfall. They made a concerted rush on guards and overwhelmed them. They ransacked the jail for weapons before fleeing, and are believed to have at least rifles and quantites of ammunition. Six of the prisoners are listed as "dangerous convicts." Police, reinforced by troops from the local garrison, overtook the band of jail breakers at the city's outskirts and forced them to take up a defense position on the hill. $200 Raised for Entrickens Portland, Aug. 3 W) Port landers have pungled up $200 for the stricken David Entricken family, whose 13-year-old daughter drowned Sunday in climax to many troubles. The family, destitute when the child drowned, is- using the money for the funeral. HELD OVER! DON STRAHL If you haven't heard him you don't want to miss him 2 EXTRA WEEKS Shattuc's Chateau Playing 9 to 2 "CONVENTION CAVALCADE" 8:30 FRIDAY NIGHT ON STAGE IN PERSON Tire annir rnoM ra hotih "CnEETA" The Little Circus raAnmiN TATO TILE CLOWN 1 ROBERT CPA l'I'V WOHLD-S MOST luoini Vll 1 isnum roKi CIRRI'S PU PETIEY DO A GREAT NOVELTY fTACK fHOW FAIRGROUNDS GRANDSTAND TICKETS AT Quisenberry's-Legion Tent A Blood Program Told To Miller Staff The blood program of the Am erican Red Cross and how the public may assist it was discuss ed by Miss Susan Faherty, man ager of Marion county chapter of the Red Cross, Wednesday mor ning for the staff of the Miller Mercantile company store. The store management invit ed all the staff to a 9 o'clock coffee at the cafeteria, coffee and rolls being served, with Miss Faherty as guest. While the blood program is a voluntary matter the store man agement states it is encourag ing staff members to become do nors and has donor cardr avail able at the office. WELCOME LEGION PARADISE ISLANDS Swim Dance - Picnic In Beautiful Surroundings Lights - Snack Bar Open Until Midnight 3 mi. east on Airport Road Western Swing DANCE SATURDAY Glenwood Ballroom . "LARRY'S" CASCADE RIDERS DAJCDAUU I A 8 P. M. SALEM SENATORS VICTORIA WATERS FIELD 25th & Mission (AL SCHACHT TONITE) New Woodburn PIX Theatre j Oregon O-SO-EASI SEATS TUE WED., AUG. 2-3 T-Men and Night Wind eomoT mu nr imm r i i