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. 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