12 o 1 FC e T P K c St 1 FO h M ENi : b ro t b Sic BY ro i i i i E ' O' 23 2 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, August fi, 1949 Predatory Animal Campaign Moves Into Higher Ground Dallas, Aug. 5 Red foxes are laying low in the valleys ofPolk county, and George Morison of near Sheridan, government trap per, has gone to the hills to conduct his continuous onslaught on predatory animals. During the last 10 days of July, the trapper bagged a yearling Mary Anne McCall will be one of the twenty-one artists featured with the Woody Her man orchestra Monday night, August 15th, when the group will bow in at the Glcnwood Ballroom in Salem for a dance engagement. Glen Woodry, lo cal promoter feels this attrac tion will break the ice for name entertainment at the Glenwood Ballroom and Woodry has a full fall sched use lined up. Hunt to File Suit for Libel Washington. Aug. 8 flJ.R) James V. Hunt, central figure in a congressional investigation of "five per centers, said today he is filing suit against the New York Herald Tribune because "irresponsible half truths" in its articles about him are ruining his business. A senate investigations sub committee began looking into Hunt's dealings after the New York newspaper first reported on his activities. Hunt said in a statement that the subcommittee has had "two attorneys and 16 investigators going over my affairs for more than six weeks. They have not even suggested that anything has been found which would warrant any charge against me." "Five per centers" are those agents who help businessmen to get government contracts, usual ly for five percent of the con trac Hu the man Herald slori he had ordered the matches tor his own use to impress prospec tive clients. "That is a lie," he said. "Their Washington staff knows it is a lie." Hunt said the first order of the matches was delivered to. the presidential campaign train in June, 1948, and in November the office of Ma. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan, President Truman's controversial military aide, re quested more. They were or dered and delivered to the White House, Hunt said. U. 5. Buys Butter lo Keep Prices Up Washington, Aug. 6 (U.R) In less than a week the government has bought 9.960.327 pounds of butter enough to supply the nation's butler needs tot three days. The butter was taken off the market at a new support price of 82 cents per pound, three cents above the previous level. The new price went into effect last week. Price support purchases of butter Monday through Friday totalled almost as much as the government bought during the previous six months, and brought Uncle Sam's butter sup- New Woodhurn PIX Theatre 3 Oregon O SO-EASY SEATS SATURDAY AUGUST 6 RETURN OF THE BADMAN and DICK TRACY MEETS ; -GRUESOME eriiory nm Richard PECK BAXTER WIDMARK zo... cat Tonight "Tht Gay Ranchero" "Mieky" t. M !Jh I "'V unt also. gave his version of l'tJ.. J ? t jLiV?t -Swiped from Harry S. Tru- W t?f Mil I ' match folders. Hesaidtlw if;. I ld Tribune, in or., of s U. ' U es, gave the Impression that BL ji , JT MrT -M tniln SUNDAY - MONDAY r- bear, three bobcats and six coyotes, all near the headwaters of Little Boulder, Big Boulder and Rogers creeks. When farmers are being har rassed with the depredations of the foxes and other animals in the lowlands, Morrison is ready, willing and able to come and help put an end to their troubles. With no recent outbreaks of trouble he has moved higher up to catch the animals in their breeding grounds. Morison found plenty of evi dence that the coyotes were playing havoc with young deer. He found the carcasses of five fawns which were obviously victims of coyotes. He reported, however, that no signs of even more destructive cougars were found in the area. The trapper operates on a salary and receives no bounty for the animals killed. County funds are supposed to be match ed by the state. Some federal assistance is given and under certain conditions, the state game commission "chips in" to help with the salary. Farmers have praised Morison' for his work, especially with foxes. In the Buell. Perrydale, Bethel and Smilhfield areas he has done an exceptionally good Job of clearing them out. "There are still plenty more in the country," he states. During the year July 1, 1048, to July 1, 1949, Morison has kill ed 213 predatory animals. At one time during the year 1942-43 he could get as high as $18.50 for a choice red fox pelt. This source of revenue is now gone since the same fur brings only about 75c, he states. Morison is available to help any farmer rid his place of pre datory animals and may be reached through the office of Jack Hayes, county judge. Brooks Club Picnics Brooks The Brooks Garden club held its annual picnic at the home gardens of Mrs. Gertrude Zenger. Dinner was served at one o'clock to 26 members and four visitors. The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Ber tha Morisky, August 11. Finds Father Harold Gcd des, 44, Detroit, Mich., attor ney, rcenacls a telephone con versation he held with his falher, William Geddcs, 67, in a San Francisco hospital. The elder Geddes disappeared mys teriously from his home in Rochester. N. Y., 43 years ago. He recently bought a worn Detroit telephone directory in Sail Francisco and called the first Harold Gedries listed. It turned out to be his son. (AP Wirephoto) ply now to 20.261,456 pounds. Officials predicted the spurt in buying would taper off promptly. They pointed out also that purchases so far are noth ing like record-breaking. In 1939 the government, In a price sup port move, bought up 122,00(1,- iti itl. t! KNn,' iul)AY SKCON1) BKi HIT "STREET WITH NO NAM K" Start I'nmnrrow font. 1:4S A. 53. t-i- yy An Original Stfn Hoy Within, yf DtftUd and FrodwW by PRESTON STURGES SECOND KEATI'HK "I.ADY AT MIDNKillT" Missing Plane Crashed in Lake When the planes from the Naval Air Reserve Training Unit at Seattle arrived in Sa lem Friday for their part in the ceremonies establishing the Sa lem Navail Air Facility one was missing. This plane an F6F (Gruman Hellcat fighter plane) shortly after take off from the air sta tion crashed in shallow water at the edge of Lake Washington. The pilot, Lt. K. H. Somerville, Seattle, member of the naval reserve, was pulled from the cockpit uninjured, by three ci vilian employes, who, according to the United Press, waded out to the point where the plane came to rest on its back. Naval officers blamed engine failure for the crash. After the 2000 horsepower engine went dead Somerville had attempted to guide the plane back onto the runway at the naval air station The brakes failed to hold after the wheels hit the runway and the plane went off the end of Ihc strip into soft ground, flip ping over into the water. Shot to Death Kissing Divorcee Southampton, N.Y., Aug. 6 VP) A town policeman was shot to death last night as he kissed a divorcee. The woman's ex-husband was found dead today with a bullet in his head. A single shot fired through an open kitchen window killed town Policeman Harold Win ters, 44. A nine-hour search for the suspected killed ended to day with the discovery of the body of Frank Zieman, 44, at Bridgehampton, 10 miles from the scene of the policeman's death. There was a bullet wound In Zicman's right temple and a .22 caliber rifle lay across his lap. Stale police said he apparently shot himself as he sat in his car. Winters was shot In the kitch en of the home of Zieman's di vorced wife, Mary, 40. Mrs. Zieman told police that Winters, in uniform and on duty, brought some sandwiches to the house lust night. They had just fin ished a lunch of sandwiches and coffee and Winters was prepar ing to go back on patrol duty. Police said he stood with his back lo the window, kissing Mrs. Zieman good-night when the bullet crashed into the back of his head. Police said they had learned Zieman recently had told friends that he planned to kill Winters, his ex-wife and himself. George Washington was the son of a Virginia ironmaster. Cont. from 1 P. M. NOW SHOWING! CO-HIT! Jan Wllev "FIG LEAF FOR EVE" ADIU.TS ONLY Ends Today! Cont. Shows ililfflal r Lulabell & Scotty 'SWING YOt'R PARTNER' TOMORROW! Veronica Lake "THE SAINTED SISTERS" Brian Donlevy "SOUTH OF TAHITI" B' Mte OvH SliowTonlle! ji rl Frip RhrlUnd Tony I Kldri for the Kid. I 1 din Surllnx Dally I Jl ICirhard Widmark IL HI "YKLLOWSKY" ill 111 Kirk Douglas ill ill Marilyn Maxwell 111 "CHAMPION" til v j o I r. - y M I A 'SI .-:7 , 1 JA:.,-.m Stricken by Gas In Swimming Pool Norma MacDonald, 10, gasps for air as ambulance attendants comfort her while an inhalator squad rushed to the rescue of her and more than 100 other bathers who were overcome when a clogged chlorine gas line used for purifying the water in an outdoor pool in Los Angeles suddenly gushed more gas than the water could absorb, filling the air with noxious fumes. Twenty-four were taken to hospitals, 10 in serious condition. (AP Wire-photo) Greek Army in Major Drive Athens, Aug. 6 OP) The Greek army kicked off today on a ma jor offensive in the Grammos mountains against a communist led guerilla force estimated at 5,000 troops. The general staff reported the guerrillas were supported in bat tle by Albanians firing from Al banian soil nearby. The Greek guerrillas are com pressed in an area of about 250 square miles against the Alban ian border west of Nestorion and northeast of Konitsa. The general staff said several defense points were taken by Greek forces southwest and northwest of the 7,000-foot high mountains in the first fighting despite "bitter resistance." Counter-attacks, is said, were repulsed and fighting continues with growing intensity. The ar my is bringing new forces into combat and said it is entering the main phase of battle. In capturing a height of Ale vitsa, in the northeast Grammos, Greek troops were fired on from a neighboring height in Albania, LAST DAY! and MGM's Virile Romantic s. Drama! SSST Jfe Tomorrow! M ROUGH... pA futte(sirls ij love it - ifek CLAREC ABLE ALEXIS SMITH "ANY NUMBER CAN PEiAY WENDELL COREY AUDREY TOTTER FRANK MORGAN . MARY AST0R LEWIS STONE BARRY SULLIVAN EDGAR BUCHANAN Hit! Stuxnyvu Ch ovc UIGHT UNTO NIGHT Mi! ,Ronold Reagan Viveca Lindfors f v v,--r MODIRICK CRWf0KD jf i rlWXifo I0SIMARY DE CAMP f fi'-. -Sv .iSM rVT)A A COLOR CARTOON WARNER Cy I "Waitcs to Riches" NEWS Great Britain Buys Canadian Lumber Washington, Aug. 6 U.R) Rep Russell Mack (R., Wash.) charg ed today that Great Britain is discriminating against the U.S. timber industry. Mack said that in buying lum ber with economic cooperation administration funds Great Brit ain is concentrating her purch ases in Canada. He said in house speech that 97 per cent of Great Britain's timber business was going to Canadian firms and only three per cent to U.S. firms. He said the British purchasing policy was "one of the principal reasons" for unemployment among Pacific northwest lumber workers. Truinan in Hide-Away Washington, Aug. 6 (P) Pres ident Truman was taking brief vacation today at his "Shangri la" hideaway near Thurmont, Md. The president and Mrs. Truman made the 60-mile drive yesterday. They will return to Washington early Monday. the command said, in an attack "supported by Albanians." "THE WIZARD OF OZ" "Henry the Rainmaker" 10 rr B -IB . Wt ggBB K is Ruben Sanders Killed in Crash Ruben Sanders, Jr., 35, an employe of the Salem Indian school at Chemawa, was killed almost instantly about 1:30 o'clock Saturday morning when the automobile he was driving crashed head-on into a heavy freight truck just south of Mil waukie. Sanders, according lo state po lice at Milwaukie, was alone and apparently on his way home when the accident occurred. Dra mond Moore, Portland, driver of the truck, was not injured. Sanders was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ruben Sanders, Sr. the for mer well-known throughout the state as an athlete and listed among the "all-time great" in football in Oregon. Recently re tired, he and his wife are mak ing their home at Chemawa where Mrs. Sanders is employed in the bakery. The younger Sanders is sur vived by his, widow and one child. The small amount of steel made in U.S. colonial days was used mainly in bayonets, swords ana cutting tools. lr1M;lilil fn. 3-3467 MATINEE DAILY FROM 1 P. M. PREVUE TONIGHT! (One Feature) AND OSCAR V- IvMfcU C m FLAMING FLAPPER DAYS r- Mw- jj&JV$ SMASH MUSICAL HIT J? Shori ROBINSON lh M 3 n Alan MOWBRAY Stanley RIDGES TXs.W' A " -1 Henry O'NEILL Selena R0YLE Td fc J yUoTr' if CO-FEATURE! 1 r M m n ! ; 1 t i . i, tilt 1 .- 3 Die, 7 Hurl In Forest Fire Helena, Mont., Aug. 6 MV-At least three men were burned to death, seven were hurt and six are missing in a mammoth forest fire near here, the federal forest service said today. Bodies of two forest service parachutists and a third fire fighter were found in a 3,000 acre fire which roared uncon trolled through timber in i primitive area northeast of Hel ena. Their names were withheld pending notification of relatives. Seven of the fifteen smoke jumpers who parachuted to the fire yesterday were burned, three seriously, the forest serv ice said. Two of the 'chutists Bill Hellman and Joseph Silvia are hospitalized here. Regional Forester P. D. Han son of Missoula said poor com munications held up complete information on casualties. Hiroshima Observes Fourth Anniversary Hiroshima, Japan, Aug. 6 (P) The fourth anniversary of v the first atom bombing was ob served today with shattered Hi roshima's 30-year plan to make itself a model city for peaceful community living. Mayor Shinzo Hamai told the iyp U VHP WWWl DANCE To the Music of Lee and the Melody Ramblers ALBANY ARMORY Every Saturday Night Admission 65c, inc. tax. aemi-Modern NOW! JOHN WAYNE in "WAKE OF THE RED WITCH" and Robert Taylor Ava Gardner in "THE BRIBE" STARTS TOMORROW! WILDE'S STORY OF WAmjUOyS LOVE! JEANNE MADELEINE CRASN CARROLL U7VGEOR61 oANUtKb k0- ' ' "" RICHARD m GREENE t- -i city'i survivors details of the plan after bells in the "peace tower" pealed in memory of the 78,000 who died in the blast. The plan calls for rebuilding 4 Hiroshima in three stages. Dur- J? ing the first years little besides planning will be done. LATE SPORTS AMERICAN Cleveland 000 000 0000 8 0 Philadelphia ...001 000 lOx 2 7 0 Lemon and Hegan; Fowler and Guerra. Detroit 000 000 0000 5 0 Boston 100 001 Olx 3 9 0 Trucks, Newhouser (7) and Swift; Parnell and Tebbets. St. Louis 304 200 0008 10 1 New York 012 022 0029 13 1 NATIONAL Philadelphia . . .010 200 0014 8 0 Pittsburgh 000 100 0203 8 0 Heintzelman, Konstanty, 18) and Seminlck; Bonham, Gumbert (8) and McCullough, Fitzgerald (8). Boston 000 000 004 4 7 2 Chicago 231 211 00X 10 13 0 Bickford. Barrett (3, Antonelli (5) and Ciadall; Dublel and Owen, Burgess IS) C0TT0NW00DS Presents ENDS TODAY! (SAT.) "TARZAN'S MAGIC FOUNTAIN" Eddie Dean "SHADOW VALLEY" PLUS! Color Cartoon 'Hula Hula Land' AIRMAIL FOX MOVIETONE NEWS! At 1 U-4 SAT., AUG. 6 Dancing 9 'til 1 1