Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 16, 1949, Page 8, Image 8

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    I? Mr. and Hn, Now Charles Eller, disabled war veteran,
carries his bride across the threshold of their home in Fresno,
f"!alif.. following their marriaee. Th bride, formerlv Miss
Ly Elyse Beckmann of Ober-Ramstadt, Germany, flew to
A I I 1 vii 1 - IM 1 a 11 I i. :
ima cuumiy aiicr finer nau uiierca lu acu uiie ui lus ejrcs
to finance her trip. A radio -program however sponsored
her trip and local citizens provided funds for the couple to
set up housekeeping, an automobile and other gifts. (AP
Wirephoto) '
ITU Convention Sees
Fight on Strike Policy
Oakland, Calif., Aug. 16 W) A dissatisfied faction within the
International Typographical union called today for convention
action to throw out the ITU's "no surrender" policy towards em
rilover contracts.
A test vote was assured. The St. Louis delegation introduced a
proposed amendment to yankf ;
the collective bargaining for
mula out of the ITU's by-laws.
Pro-administration deMLg a t e s
countered with a measure to ex
tend the union president's con
trol over contracts.
Close associates of ITU's six
term president, Woodruff Ran
dolph of Indianapolis, conceded
the opposition little chance to
upset the bargaining pattern set
up in 1947. The 91st annual
meeting of the nation's oldest
trade union is in its third day
here. It has three more days
to go.
' The policy has Involved the
AIL affiliate in an Intense two
years of battle, both on the
legal front and 'the picket lines.
At the heart of it is the ITU's
bitter opposition to the Taft
Hartley act. The ITU contends
the law has hit it harder than
other unions because of the
printers' history of closed shop
contracts and close regulation
of work.
The union has been on strike
against Chicago newspaper pub
lishers since Nov. 24, 1948. It
has been the target of 10 man
agement complaints to the na
tional labor relations board. The
employers accuse the ITU of at
tempting to avoid provisions of
the Taft-Hartley act.
In one case, that filed by the
American Newspaper Publishers
association, NLRB general coun
sel Robert Denham obtained a
federal court injunction to keep
the union in line with the labor
statute. The same court in In
dianapolis slapped a contempt
citation on the ITU.
Henry Kaiser, ITU attorney
in an address yesterday, spoke
of Denham's action as "vicious,
unconscionable attacks" on the
very life of the printer organi
zation.
He said that if Denham sue
ceeded in efforts to invalidate
30 of the union's laws it would
turn over to employers the right
to run the ITU.
Portland Bans
Punchboards
Portland, Ore., Aug. 16 (U.R)
Punchboards today joined slot
machines and other gambling
paraprenalia in a special limbo
created by Portland's law-enforcing
mayor, Dorothy McCul
lough Lee.
The only punchboards still
legal after midnight Monday
were a few "skill" boards which
oaid off for the right answers to
such questions as "how many
aliens were deported from the
U. S. in 1904?" ,
Mayor Lee, a stately, gray
haired woman lawyer, still de
nies that she is a crusader. She
says she is merely enforcing
anti-lottery laws on the city
books which were never enfor
ced before.
The mayor's drive against
punchboards started soon after
she dropped into a drug store
and lost 15 cents on three
punches. She said the incident
had nothing to do with her de
termination to stamp out gamb
ling, but only helped demon
strate that illegal boards were
loose In the city.
Tavern owners, drug store op
erators and many small grocers
complained that elimination of
punchboards would stifle an im
portant source of revenue. The
city administration replied, in
effect, that businessmen should
not depend upon illegal methods
of meeting overhead expenses
Mayor Lee and Police Chief
Charles P. Pray set up an in
spection system at the city li
cense bureau office to make
punchboards conform to the let
ter of the law defining so-called
'question-and-answer" boards.
Typhoon Kills 3
!n Kyushu Island
Tokyo, Aug. 16 P) Three
persons were killed today by a
typhoon which struck central
and western Kyushu island and
then moved westward into the
Japan sea.
Reports from Japan's most
southernmost island said the
winds disrupted communications
and damaged houses and rice
paddies. Heavy rains forced
some rivers out of their banks.
There was no official estimate
of damage.
Not a Polio Victim
New York, Aug. 16 (P) Mrs
Cornelius Vanderbilt, .Jr., does
not have polio, as first suspected
doctors reported last night.
Tests ruled out polio, but her
ailment had not yet been diag
nosed, a hospital spokesman
said.
5 H KJH
jjlfj?J:ii.. iaffTf r' " rum f 4 i 1
Spirit of Cupid Vice President Alben Barkley and Mrs.
Carleton Hadley pose for an exclusive photograph at Bark
ley's estate near Paducah, Ky. The picture was taken by
Robert C. Holt, Jr., staff photographer of the Nashville Ten
nessean. (AP Wirephoto copyright 1949 by Nashville Ten
' nessean)
ROMANCE FROWNED ON
Does a Kiss Belong
At End of Western Movie?
By PATRICIA CLARY
Hollywood (U.R) A brave movie producer is trying to settle for
all time the burning question of whether western movies ought
to end with a kiss. S :
Producer Nat Holt is shooting
Freshour Family
Gathers at Park
Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, August 16, 1949 9
Dayton Descendants and rel
atives of the late George and Iso
belle Freshour held the annual
picnic at the Maude Williamson
Memorial park near Wheatland.
There were one son and three
daughters present and two j Mrs.
I?. .an nf TillmAnk anH U.c Mall I
rwainy uraKe, aaugmer oi Mr.
and Mrs. Ardilla Krake, who was
one year old and the youngest
child of Klamath Falls; Mr. and
Mrs. Don Fleischman (Elsie
Wirfs) and three children of Sa
lem; Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Church
man of Newberg.
August 14 was the birthday of
Henry Freshour and a birthday
cake was baked by his daughter,
Tommy Lyman for the oc-
The youngest girl was
his picture, "Man of the Plains,"
both ways. And hes going to
leave it up to preview audiences
to settle the issue.
"We're planning to find two
preview audiences who are as
alike as we can make them
same number of kids in the
theater, same economic status
and so on," he said. "We'll show
one group the picture with the
kiss and the other group the pic
ture without.
"Then we hope from the re
sponse we get we'll be able to
ences object to kissing."
In one ending of the picture
Randblph Scott plants a solid
buss on Jane Nigh. In the other,
he just looks at her in a manner
intended to 1 mylpthat something
may come of it after all.
The kiss-or-not-to-kiss contro
versy often has been resolved in
the past by the picture's budget.
You can't get by without a half
dozen kissel in high-bracket,
million- dollar westerns starring
Gregory Peck, Gary Cooper or
Robert Taylor.
But In the lower-budget west
erns, like the ones starring Gene
Autry and Roy Rogers, kissing is
strictly taboo. Their producers
are so scared of romance that
when Rogers married his leading
lady they tried to throw her out
of the pictures.
"T h e high-budget pictures
play in the big city first-run
theaters," Holt explained. "The
low-budget ones play in the
small towns and neighborhood
kid matinees.
Consequently, Holt could, if he
wanted "to , release his picture
with both endings the lovely
one for the cities, and the other
for the sticks. Or maybe a theater
could buy both versions.
Then he could put the kissless
version on for the Saturday mati
nees and the kissing one on at
night.
(Freshour) Griffith of McMinn-
ville, who were unable to attend i
because of illness in the families.
Those present were: Mrs. Mar-
iam (Freshour) Krake; her son.
Mr. and Mrs. Ardilla Krake and
daughters Karen and Kathy of
McMinnville; Mr. and Mrs.
George Blum (Wanda Krake) of
Tillamook; a granddaughter, Su
sie Young of Spokane, daughter
of Lillian Krake Young; Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Freshour of Cutler
City; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Freshour
and three children, Mr. and Mrs.
Tommy Lyman (Thelma) and
three children, of Dayton; Mr.
and Mrs. Granny Freshour and
child of LaFayette; Mr. and Mrs.
Gahlon Freshour and two chil
dren, of McMinnville; Mr. and
Mrs. Johnny Fisher (Rita Fresh
our) and three children of Hub
bard. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bus
by (Harriet Freshour) and Gin
ny of Independence; Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Busby and three
children of Independence; Mrs.
Laurel (Busby) Gallagher and
two children of The 'Dalles.
Mrs. Cora (Freshour) Wirfs,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wirfs and two
children; Mr. and Mrs. Earnest
Beichel, Jr. (Gladys Wirfs) and
two children all of Dayton; Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Groth (Dot
Wirfs) and four children of De
Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Pete Brown
(Donna Wirfs) of Newberg; Mr
and Mrs. Ted Wirfs and baby of
Forest Grove; Mr. and Mrs. Mon
ty Evans (Lucille Wirfs) and
boy was Gary Wirfs, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Wirfs.
KNOW
Your Rood and Street
Names
Over 650 Named Streets
and Roads on the New
Salem Street Map Ob
tainable at the Office of
Mel Propp
Surveyor 341 State
Mail $1.00 and Receive
Map by Return Mail
(Advertisement)
Druggists' Prescription
For Relief of Itch
When youi skin is Irritated
with pimples, red blotches and
other skin blemishes from ex
ternal causes you're crazy with
itching torture, try Sanitone
Ointment, itching stops prompt
ly. Smarting disappears imme
diately Sanitone Ointment is
also wonderful for itching feet,
cracks between toes and Ath
lete's foot.
For Sale at
Willett's Capital Drug Store
'State at Liberty Phone 3-S1 It
Dorothy Gray
1km ufWs'
The Original
Three-Lipstick Pouch
plus ta
Complete Fall
Lipstick Wardrobe!
NEWIST SHADISl
PORTRAIT PINK ( NOSEGAY
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The little red pouch doubles as a coin pursel
Capital Drug Store
State and Liberty "On the Corner"
Palmistry Readings
Will tell your
and future. W!
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I advise on
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r upco 9 a.m.
Moved from 466 Ferry to
173 S. Commercial
MAYTAG
CERTIFIED REBUILT
WASHER
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Priced 01 low at
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Many Other Makes to Choose From
GUARANTEED SATISFACTION
Jjpok what joq ge"c for t iw 00
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Come see this Stunning New Buick Special
big in room, big in valve-in-head straight-8 power,
easy to manage in size and price
miS BUCK SPECIAL S-PASSCNGCK COUPI
fModaf 461 cfoei doubfo duly at a butincu
ear and a eef or rht tmolt family.
lea, we know it looks like a lot more money.
That stunning new front end those graceful,
tapering fenders those bigger interiors and high
visibility windows add up to a car you'd expect
to wear a pretty fancy price tag.
Bui come in and see for yourself, how right we
were when we said this new beauty was priced
right down your alley.
Come try the comfort-patterned seats, handle this
easily managed wheel, lift the hood and see the
bonnet-filling valve-in-head straight-eight power
plant you command, mea iure the shorter bumper-to-bumper
length.
Then do a little hard-boiled matching-up of
price tags.
In particular comfort this beauty with the sixes
and ask yourself why you should pay for straight
eight power and not get it.
You have, remember, three smart body types to
choose from the tidy, three -passenger Coupe
shown here, a neat 2-door, six-passenger Sedanet
and a smart 4-door Sedan with the roomiest
interiors ever found in a Buick Special.
They're going fast, as you might
expect. Getting a firm order in is
a smart move just to insure early
delivery.
How about dropping in the first
minute you can?
DELIVERED AT YOUR DOOR
Model 46 3-pastenger Coupe mu,i,oi.dj $2097.00
Model 46-S 6-pastenger Sedanel . , , $2155.00
Model 43 6-passenger 4-door Sedan . $2208.00
Hat and tlly laxtt, If any, txlra. Dynaflow Drive optional of xfro
cotf. All prift iubtcf fo changt wrffiovf rtoftr Preti may vary itiahtty
In ad(olning eommun(fti became of tramportation char qui.
SPBCALLV VOtV
YOUt KCV TO G1AIE VfWl (G
mm
When better autontobilen are built itt'lVK trill build them
l Wr . TArlOft, AK HhwoiI. Mil Monitor truing.
OTTO J. WILSON
i
wiLLAntTTI mill I UMIIi JirniASii sunt tvisimis. v
5ALEM OREGON CITY j
115 South Commercial
388 North Commercial
Phone 3-9148
Phone 2-3621