2 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Saturday, August 13, 1949 Non-Unionisls To Unload Ships Honolulu, Aug. 13 W) Ha waii's new waterfront boss told the islands 54p,000 residents last night the government would begin unloading strikebound ships early next week. Harbor Manager Ben F. Rush likewise told the striking CIO international longsh o r e m e n's union the territorial government would brook no interference in operating the seized docks. Shortly before Rush spoke in a radio broadcast, the strik ing longshoremen met and unan imously voted approval of a mo tion condemning the "strike breaking law." This referred to the emergency act under which the government seized the struck stevedoring companies. Rush said the hiring of 1,680 non-union men to work the docks was progressing. He con ceded the territory could not control the threatened picketing on the mainland of ships loaded by government workers. But he declared "we can and will control the handling of car go into and out of Hawaiian ports." That meant the emergency law would be invoked it some maritime unions carry out their plans to walk off ships in Hawaii out of respect to ILWU picket lines. The law provides for injunc ; tion action against interference with government dock opera tions. It also provides penalties of a $500 fine and three months in jail for interference. Former Priest Weds Divorcee Phoenix, Ariz., Aug. 13 W) A former Catholic priest and a divorcee will be married here tonight by a Judge of the Jewish faith. Emmelt J. McLoughlin, who resigned from the Franciscan order eight months ago, will wed Miss Mary Davis. Both are from Phoenix. The ceremony will be perfor med by Superior Court Judge Charles Bernstein. McLoughlin is the superin tendent and one of the founders of St. Monica's hospital here. His efforts while still In the priesthood were largely respon sible for making the institution possible. It was erected as a charity organization in a poor district of the city. 70 New Cases Polio Reported, New York New York, Aug. 13 (P) Sev enty cases of Infantile paralysis were reported in New York to day the largest number for any 24-hour period this year. How ever, officials said that some of the cases may have been con tracted previously and that the reports had been delayed. Four additional deaths also were reported. There now have been 918 cases and 70 deaths this year In what the health de partment continues to term a moderate polio epidemic. Pay Dispute May Be Settled Soon Portland, Ore., Aug. 13 (U.R) Hope grew today that a settle ment would be reached in the pay dispute between AFL team sters and Portland wholesale produce and grocery employers Commissioners Leo Kotln and George Walker of the U. S. con ciliation and medintlon service said "some progress" was made in talks between the union and employers held in the commis sion office yesterday. Another meeting with media tion service officers will be held Tuesday morning. Volunteer Firemen See Fire Causes Silverton From the nature of the start of fires in empty lots in the vicinity of West field Center and South streets in West Hill, requiring the ef forts of the volunteer firemen at small hours of the night for three consecutive evenings, the volunteers are investigating as to the cause of the blazes as the circumstances have been simi lar. The firemen have been able to check the fires with reports of no material damage. The last fire was controlled Thursday night. GOOD FOOD and DON STRAHL in His FINAL WEEK Shattuc's Chateau nj 1 if) I Sergeant Joins Staff Sgt. Charles Domogalla, Salem ma rine reserve, who August 6 reported for active duty at the Salem Marine Corps Reserve inspector-instructor office. Domogalla on Salem Staff A Salem man, Sgt. Charles Domogalla, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Domogalla, August 6 joined the staff of the inspector instructor for the Marine Corps Reserves at the Salem Naval and Marine Corps reserve training center. The sergeant, a reserve order ed to active duty, was a veteran of 39 months of service with the navy during the last war. He spent 30 months on sea duty aboard the USS California in the Pacific and at the time of his discharge was a pharmacist mate, second class. Before transferring to the Ma rines Domogalla was a naval re serve and spent nine months on active duty with the navy as a reservist, terminating that serv ice m June of this year. Pravda Accused Tito Of Double-Dealing Moscow, Aug. 13 P) The communist party newspaper Pravda today accused Yugoslav Premier Marshal Tito of con ducting a "double-dealing, trai torous policy." The newspaper comment fol lowed yesterday's Soviet note to Yugoslavia calling the Tito re gime an "enemy and foe of the Soviet Union." The mask has been torn away," Pravda declared. The Soviet note, harshest blast in the year-long feud be tween Tito and the comlnform (communist International infor mation bureau) countries, ac cuses Yugoslavia of siding with the western anti-communist countries. Spruce Budworm In N. W. Increases Portland, Ore., Aug. 13 tm The spruce budworm threat to Pacific northwest forests is in creasing. So reported two federal scien tists here yesterday afler flights over most of Oregon and Wash ington. Entomologists John F. Wear and W. J. Buckhorn said the worst region was in the Blue mountains of eastern Oregon and Washington, with an area 120 by 140 miles infested. They reported the budworm infestation increases 61 percenl from 1947 to 1948 and made further inroads this year. ENDS TODAY! STARTS TOMORROW! Adults Mat., 85c Eve. $1.25 Children 50c 55? I fill . OU 'Hill HM01 1 SUUI van I CIKH NAilM IONO CAM OP IMM'ltO IIIVOWlCl -HUtO MAlHIlD -GNI lOClMtfl fOMN -OlOtOt COUIOVItJ KHM IMItMO d CICI1 tflkAWAV -,4 H ow tim, w tt4 ttllt rKTVIIL hImiW b? tKO lAOtO PtCTVUS rioouct. it WALTER WANGER ,i.k- ., VICTOR FLEMING Cartoon "THE LITTLE ORPHAN" Newt Urges Speed for Hoover Plan Washington, Aug. 13 m Sen ate leaders today stepped up ac tion on two government reor ganization plans after President Truman tartly urged their ap proval as a sign of good faith by congress. In a strongly-worded letter to Vice President Barkley yester day, Mr. Truman observed: "The action taken on these plans will demonstrate whether the many recent professions of support for increased efficiency and economy in government are to be taken seriously or are to be written off as political ora tory." The two proposals one to set up a cabinet-rank department of welfare, the other to transfer two employment agencies from the federal security agency to the labor department have re ceived thumbs-down treatment from the senate expenditures committee. The president said senate ob jections to the plans "appear to me to be ill-founded and mis' taken." And he added that con gressional failure to approve the proposals would emperil "the whole great endeavor" of gov ernment reorganization. Senate Democratic Leader Lu cas (ill.) announced yesterday that he will set aside the money bill for the interior department to take up the welfare depart ment reorganization plan on Tuesday. Holds Alaska Defenseless Washington, Aug. 13 (U.R) Gov. Ernest Gruening of Alaska has warned congress that the ter ritory is defenseless and "could be taken tomorrow by a minor scale airborne invasion." In a telegram to Sen. Lester C. Hunt, D., Wyo., Gruening said he considered it "unbelieveable" that congress has deferred action on a $137,738,712 defense auth orization for Alaska. This inaction by congress, he said, is "perpetuating Alaska as America's Achilles heel." He pointed out that Alaska, only 54 miles across the Bering Straits from "our police state neighbor," was the only part of North America invaded in World War II. Lions Plan Benefit For Band Uniforms Silverton For the benefit of the high school band uniform fund, the members of the Sil verton Lions club voted to spon sor a home talent play the eve nings of September 30 and Oc tober 1. The committee in charge named by the president, Gene Smith, will be Ernest R. Ekman, A. B. Anderson. Paul Innes and V.V. Runyan. The club held a dinner busi ness session at the Double J. res taurant with the showing of colored films by Ernest R. Ek man, depicting the making and history of totem poles among the Indians of the Alaskan area. Dr. A. L. V. Smith, program chairman, announced the annual family picnic to be Wednesday evening, August 24, at a loca tion along the Ablqua river. F. M. Powell is serving as substitute secretary during the absence of Phillip Cliles dur ing the summer months. "LITTLE WOMEN In Technicolor Also "Majesty of Yellowstone" Feature Starts 1:30, 4:20,7:10, 10:00 Roaring Inferno Smoke billows skyward from a forest fire in Idaho's Payette National forest, where more than 500 men are fighting the roaring inferno along the Salmon River canyon in terrain two rugged for bulldozers and tractors. The blaze, "spreading rapidly" after destroying 4200 acres, is one of 12 disastrous blazes roaring out of control in Mon tana and Idaho. (Acme Telephoto) West Germans Vote on Sunday Frankfurt, Germany, Aug 13 (U.R) Germans who had been held as war prisoners in Russia broke, up two communist elec tion rallies today and beat one speaker so severely he was re moved on a stretcher. An estimated 20,000,000 voters in the three western zones of Germany will go to the polls to morrow in the country's first free parliamentary election since 1933. At Walsrode, in the British zone, a group of former war prisoners rushed the platform at a communist rally and attacked the speaker. The crowd dispers ed. There was no violence at the communist rally in nearby Ben- theim, but a single former war prisoner in tattered garments pushed away a communist orator and shouted to the mob: "No body dare tell us P. W.'s anything about Russia. This is the way Soviet Russia released We know the situation there only too well." He said the rags he wore had been given him in Russia when he was about to be repatriated. The election will choose the 400 members of the lower house (Bundestag) of the paraliament of the new '.'federal republic of Germany." Women Air Recruits Now Wanted by Navy The U. S. naval reserve pro gram has expanded, allowing women without previous experi ence to enroll, it was announced today by Lt. Ernest T. Eldridge, commanding officer, Associated Volunteer Unit (Aviation) No. 3. Women high school graduates between the ages of 18 and 40 years, who have no minor depen dents, are eligible and should contact Major John L. Schwabe at the AVU (A) No. 3 office on 9' Last Times Today - CORA EDDY I Is Coming Paromounl pr.nH MHItT MMtS DIKKAH IMtYk NEWTON MASON KERR WILLIAMS. Would YOU. too. cond.mn hit girl ... If you know nor SHOCKING rory? EXTRA! COLOR CARTOON WARNER NEWS the east side of McNary field be tween the hours of 10 a. m. and 3 p. m. either Saturday or Sun day, August 13 or 14. Reservists needn't quit their jobs or give up their social life. They remain civilians and be come eligible to receive navy training in their spare time. They also may become eligible to re ceive retirement benefits through participation in AVU (A) No. 3 training drills. Admitted Slayer Awaits Trial Tacoma, Wash., Aug. 13 fP) Anxious to "get this thing straightened out," the admitted slayer of an elderly Tacoma couple waited in the Pierce county jail today for his first degree murder trial. The 33-year-old ex-convict, John Edward Summers, was re turned here yesterday from San Francisco where he was arrest ed by the FBI last week in a rooming house. His capture ended a ' 19-day coastwlde search that was touched off by the discovery of the bullet-pierced bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Easley in the woods 18 miles east of Enum claw. Summers admitted the double slaying when brought before a U. S. commissioner in San Fran cisco, but he contended the shoot ing was accidetnal. He had been living with a benefactress near the Easleys. Sheriff's Capt. John Kendersi, one of the three officers who brought Summers north, said the Washington state prison pa rolee was quiet and agreeable during the trip. "His only comment was that he wanted to get this thing straightened out," Kendersi said. Tom's King Cole Drive In Now featuring CHICKEN-IN-THE BASKET and HOME MADE PIES! Have you trlrd the new KING COLE DOUBLE BURGER? Open 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. dally Closed Mondays South Commercial St. Just beyond the Liberty Y TOM ADOLPHSON, Prop. "CASABLANCA" & "G-MEN' TOMORROW! i4 CROSBY America's Favorite Star in America's Favorite Classicl With Rhonda Fleming William Bendlx Sir Cedric Hardwicke Murvyn Vye Henry Wilcoxnn Virginia Field 2ND ACE HIT! T ClONIN I British Aviatrix In Greenland Halifax, N. S., Aug. 13 (P)A pretty British housewife neared the end of a globe-circling flight today, after piloting her little plane from Laborador to Green land in defiance of Canadian air regulations Mrs. Richarda Morrow-Tait, 26 made the 700-mile flight with her navigator yesterday. Only two more overwater hops from Greenland to Iceland to Britain stand in the way of fulfilling her dream of being the first wo man to pilot a single-engined plane around the world. Canadian aviation authorities, who had forbidden the transat lantic flight as unsafe for single engined civilian planes, had ordered Mrs. Morrow-Tait to fly back to Bangor, Me. She took off at 7 a. m. (est) yesterday, ostensibly for Bangor, then changed course and landed six and one half hours later at Bluie West one, the U. S. air base in southern Greenland. Canadian officials said Mrs. Morrow-Tait was now outside Canadian jurisdiction. They would not speculate on whether the British woman would have further trouble with U. S. auth orities at the Greenland base. Waiting in England for the world flier are her husband and two-year-old daughter. She saw them last on Aug. 18, 1948, when she took off on her eastward trip, She had hard luck most of the way. Her little plane hit a ditch in Marseilles, Frances, and had engine trouble at Calcutta, India. Last November the plane crash ed near the Alaska highway, 235 nines sDum or raimanKs. fUiyj: - -UAVIU BUTLER hWUMM JACOBS M m w t. v - ENDS TODAY! "MURDERS IN RUE MORGUP" (SAT.) Ph. 3-3721 Cont. From 1 P.M. TOMORROW! r"Jit iiTiia:iii:H.iimi.M:i;i,H.v,'fn Jll iflfffi;t,TTir Co-Hit! 1 Airport Status In State Shown th federal air- port program in the state of Ore gon was announced today by R. D Bedinger, regional adminis trator of the civil aeronautics ad ministration, in Seattle. Din,i in .Tulv 1. there had been made available in the state of Oregon $l,eBB,o "H"' funds for the construction and : ..omont nt aimorts. The appropriation for the fiscal year commencing Juiy j, '""'-; niiDhi to this state $534,714 for such use, thus making a to tal of $2,201,176 in federal lunas, which had been made available fnr Oreeon airport construction and improvement to date. Construction nas oeen tuin niiH is underway, or initiated for 18 separate projects at 12 airports in Oregon, ine amoum of federal funds allocated for thpcik nrn iects is $545,659 and with the addition of the requir ed local matching funds Drings the present airport construction program In the state near the million dollar mark. A brief resume of the projects now unrierwav and the amounts of the participating federal funds obligated includes: Alhnnv armiisition of land. federal share, $3,853, completed. Albany, drainage construction, federal share, $16,537, applica tion received. F.ncpnp. narkinff and taxi area. federal share $11,200, under con struction. McMinnville, installation o f lighting, federal share, $8,763 completed. Salem, runway surfacing, fed eral share, $46,724, completed. f ederal funds are now tenia tivplv nllnnntpri fnr 18 more Dro Meets, including eight additional airports, which could be under contract or completed by July 1 im.iii -I npsp nrn ppii inp mrtp- Albany, construction of run way and administration build inff fpriprnl sharp tlfl 1111 Eugene airpark, preparation of landing area, federal share, $25,000. TCnppnp nnufpr 1 1 n p im provement, federal share, $8,- 034. McMinnville, grading and draining, federal share, $5,237. Salem, construction of admin- 1 " i i iTiVi lii New Woodburn PIX Theatre Oregon O SO-EAST SEATS Sat. ' "MELODY TIME" and "ARIZONA RANGERS" Sun., Mon. August 14-15 "FAMILY HONEYMOON" 'a 'J I II 1 l( RAY GORDON rt nrrv nh . it and "THE RAVEN" B I ' 1 .1 r mTZTTil . ! 1 U 1 ,U1 .I'll Istration building, ffcderal iU $35,364. Salem, installation of high 1 tensity lighting, federal shat.' $27,912. ' Several additional tentative t. locations have bean issued, n accordance with requests for tn eral aid from sponsors, for pro. j jects where the rate of progres, I is uncertain. Some of these ai. f locations may be wdthdrawn for :' 1 use elsewhere as needed. Re. ;' quests are expected for addition. al projects to be undertaken ; ' this year. . The present federal aid airport act provides for additional ap. ' . propriations each year through 1953 and these funds will be ' ' available for future additional projects in the state of Oregon. j Dry Spell Cuts Into Crop Yield Portland, Aug. 113 W) A Julv dry spell cut into Oregon crop prospects, the Federal Crop Re. porting service saiid today. Late frost damage also show- ed up, especially 1 n Klamath I! basin potatoes. c' The Crop Reporting service : said yields will be down in i spring wheat, rye, flaxseed, po- t v tatoes, dry peas and hay. Un- f changed were earlier estimates for winter wheat, oats, barley ' and hops. Jk The wheat harvest was estl-. i mated at 21,365.000 bushels, a 1, decline of 273,000 bushels from ' the estimate of Jluly 1. ! The estimate fbr the Klamath basin potato crop was 10,105,000 ' bushels. This was down 6 per cent from the Jluly 1 estimate and 12 per cent under the 1948 output. The drop was blamed on June frosts, more damaging than apparent at first. Pa0 g Silverton Sun. Mon. VM "Ttl Palofar' pales by comparison! IwJnOlllWK" MARY JANE " , OWL SHOW TONIGHT AFTER 10:05 P.M. Mat. Dially From 1 P.M. NOWriT S TERRIFIC! 4 TCCHMCOWX WilUavn WllU.m HOLPEW BENDIZ CO-FEATURE! Ends TJoday! (Cont. shows) John Wayne "SEA SPOILERS' Charles Blckford "THE STORM" TOMORROW! Dan Dailer "YOU WERE MEANT FOR ME" o Monte Hale "SON OF GOD'S COUNTRY" 1 1 SgEJ tW Free Shrtl.nd Pony WT I Bidel tat th. Kid- I 4lta SUrMni D.llr $ 1 1 Wayne Morris I rll "THE YOUNGER 1(1 ill Johnny Sheffield til Ill "BOIHBA, THE I j ill JUNGLE BOY" II j 11 TTTU ft