Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 23, 1949, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, August 23, 1949
Murray Raps
Steel Insults'
New York, Aug. 23 fP) Philip
Murray, president of the CIO
Steelworkers union, declared to
day that statements of steel in
dustry executives before a presi
dential fact-finding board were
"an insult to the President of the
United States."
Murray, beginning the union
rebuttal to the steel companies'
presentation, devoted his open
ing statement to an answer to
Clarence B. Randall, president
of the Inland Steel Co. The union
seeks a 30 cents-an-hour pack
age, including pensions and in
surance benefits.
"Mr. Randall impugns the mo
tives of the president in estab
lishing the steel industry board,"
said Murray, who also is CIO
president.
"He charges the president with
taking 'extra-legal action' at my
request and implies that the
president did so because of 'poli
tical alliance' and obligation to
me. "Mr. Randall's statement in
this regard is an insult both to
the high office and the person of
the President of the United
States."
Murray added that "I cannot
of course presume to answer for
the President. I can say for my
self there is no truth or substance
in this statement."
Aufo Whacks
House, Garage
The folks in the house thought
it was an earthquake.
It wasn't. It was only papa
coming home. '
W. S. Brown. 1840 North
Summer street, has an almost
new car a 1948 Kaiser-Fraser
sedan, no less. It's badly dam
aged. Worse damaged is the
Brown garage. And the dwell
ing bears scars.
Brown is a sober man. But his
experience driving cars is lim
ited. About 10 o'clock Monday
night he was attempting to drive
into his garage when the car
hit a lawn swing that was too
near the driveway.
The auto caromed and hit the
side of the house, then took a
lurch sideways and whammed
into a side wall of the garage.
That side of the garage col
lapsed and wedged the automo
bile beneath it. It's there now,
or was at last accounts.
One of the freakish things
about the accident was that a
timber of the garage punctured
the car at one of the headlights.
and penetrated almost to the
rear.
Stocks Decline
Up to 2 Points
New York, Aug. 23 UP)
Leading stocks dropped frac
tions to more than two points
today in the largest market de
cline in more than two months.
Final prices were at the lows
for the day in most cases.
Only meager offerings of
stock were enough to force the
market lower.
Weakness became more pro
nounced in late dealings when
lots of only 100 shares or so ap
peared on tiie ticker tape at sue
cessivcly lower prices.
Activity was no more than
routine, with turnover in the
neighborhood of B00.000 shares
for the full session.
The current decline started
Friday after the market had
climbed to the high point of its
summer rally and within easy
distance of the 1940 peak.
India recently sent a mission
to Argentina lo increase com
mercial relations between the
two countries.
NEW TODAY!
2 Major Hits
MartMfttt tf txctttnwntt
Mamttrtt if suspwiM.
t Mfornt
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CHARIJ. E.
MTRNA LOY ROBERT MITCKUM
JOHN STEINBECK'S
A LEWIS MILESTONE PRODUCTION
LOUIS CALHERN
SHEPPERD STRUDWICK
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f f-mi'i T "
Fxtra! BlOS BI'NNY "rARTOON - VvARNKR NFWS
LATE SPORTS
St. Louis 010 301 0005 8 0
Brooklyn 001 000 1103 8 2
Lanier, Wilks (31 and D. Rice:
Hatten. Erskine 6 j . Mlnner 181
and Campanella.
Dixiecrats on
Trial for Purge
Washington, Aug. 23 fl
States' rights members of the
democratic national committee
went on trial at a party "court"
today on charges of desertion in
last year's political campaign.
Southerners in congress fully
expect the democratic family
row to wind up in a verbal
spanking, to be publicly admin
istered to states' righters tomor
row by the national committee.
The committee is getting to
gether to pick a new chairman
But before it gets around to
that, backers of President Tru
man want to give the boot to
national committeemen and wo
men who refused to support him
in last year's campaign. A cre
dentials committee will pass
judgment on that.
The national committee meet
ing is the first since the 1948
democratic convention which
brought on:
A scrap over civil rights, a
spectacular walkout by some
Dixie delegations, and election
victories for the rebellious
states' -ighters in Alabama, Mis
sissippi, Louisiana and South
Carolina.
These four states went for
Oov. Strom Thurmond of South
Carolina, the states' rights pres
idential candidate.
Now it is up to the credentials
committee to recommend reten
tion or expulsion of the national
committee members from those
stales. The national committee
Tarem Tells of
Baltic Nations
Though Latvia, Lithuania and
Estonia did not even participate
in World War II, almost one out
of every three persons living in
those countries were casualties,
Ardo Tarem, an Estonian now
serving as piiysical education in
structor at the Salem YMCA,
told members of the Salem Jun
ior Chamber of Commerce in
their regular Tuesday noon meet
ing at the Golden Pheasant res
taurant. The Baltic slates, comprised
of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia,
are situated between Russia and
Germany, and thus became the
center of much battle action dur
ing the war, Tarem explained
It was in the fighting between
the Russians and Germany that
the casualties among the Baltic
slate nations occurred.
When the Russians marched
through the Baltic slates in their
thrust toward Germany, the
Germans drove them back by
bombing the Baltic countries.
Then when the Germans occu
pied the Baltic states, the Rus
sians did the bombing. Conse
quently, it was the innocent
Baltic states which suffered the
most damage, Tarem said.
Many cities were completely
devastated by the bombings.
Tarem said, and the people of
those countries have been work
ing constantly since the termina
tlon of the war in an all-out ef
fort to rebuild the cities.
In addition to building up the
ruined buildings, bridges, etc.,
the Baltic people re also slow
ly but surely regaining their
former independent govern
ments, Tarem reports.
Baltic youth were recently
sent out to all corners of the
world to gain technical equip
ment and knowledge from other
countries, Tarem said. It is
through use of this equipment
and knowledge that Latvia,
Lithuania and Estonia are grad
ually developing once more into
three of the most wealthy small
countries on Ihe globe.
FK1.DMAN
HOWL WITH DAGW00D
at I
'Ti'r
counts ncumc crtJ by CHIC YOUNG
J
Deadlock in
Hawaii Strike
Honolulu, Aug. 23 JP A led
eral mediator tried today to re
start often-stalled union-em
ployer negotiations to settle Ha
waii's 115-day dock strike.
Cyrus S. Ching. director of
the U.S. conciliation service,
supplied the impetus for the
new attempt to resume direct
peace talks. He suggested yes
terday the striking CIO Interna
tional Longshoremen's and
Warehousemen's union and the
seven struck stevedoring firms
try again.
Mediator George Hillenbrand,
who has worked on the dispute
since before the strike started
May 1, was doing the spade-
work. He scheduled a morning
meeting with employers. He
said he planned a separate ses
sion with the ILWU strike com
mittee during the day.
'All I can do," Hillebrand
said, "is suggest they resume ne
gotiations again in line with the
suggestion by Director Ching. "
So far, he added, Ching had
given him no new specific pro
posal to present.
The latest negotiations were
broken off Friday., Both sides
had agreed before they started
to invite Ching to come here as
mediator if they made no prog
ress. Senators Fight
Navy Yard Cut
Portsmouth, N.H., Aug. 23 M")
The Portsmouth Herald said
today that Defense Secretary
Johnson will announce tomor
row a wholesale slash of civi
lian workers in the nation's ma
jor naval shipyards.
But, the Herald said, a "show
down fight" to delay both John
son's announcement and the pro
posed cutbacks is being carried
on by senators and congressmen
from seven states which would
be hit.
The newspaper quoted an un
named reliable source in Wash
ington as saying the defense sec
retary's announcement content
plated total elimination of the
two yards and "drastic" curtail
ments in personnel and opera
tions at others, Including Ports
mouth.
Lack of funds was given as
the reason for the job slashes.
The. Herald listed these sen
ators as joining in the drive to
head off the announcement and
the plan: Bridges and Tobey of
New Hampshire, Brewster and
Smith of Maine, Saltonstall and
Lodge of Massachusetts, May
bank and Johnston of South
Carolina, Nolan and Downey of
California, Martin and Meyers
of Pennsylvania, Ives and Dulles
of New York.
Hay Prices I'p tZ Ton
Portland, Aug. 23 W) North
west hay prices advanced around
$2 a ton in Ihe past week, Carl
R. Richardson, department of
agriculture market news repre
sentative, reported today. Good
demand at Portland and Puget
Sound markets was reported.
Deteriorating ranges due to lack
of rainfall brought need for
earlier than usual supplemental
feeding, he reported.
ltlrfsrir1l
PHONE 3-3721 OPENS 6:45 P.M.
STARTS TODAY!
Ht PtmO HOCKEY FASTER THAN FURY...
m
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CO-HIT! FROM SENSATIONAL FILMS
DISCOVERED AFTER IERLIN FELL!
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COLOR CARTOON LATE NEWS!
$ 1 5,000 HOME GOES
'Dream House' Becomes
Nightmare to Couple
New York, Aug. 23 tP) Add housing problems:
A two-story "dream house," exhibited in the west 52nd street
night club belt overshadowed by
was won in a drawing three weeks ago by a student veteran's
wife.
Find Dynamite
In Cohen's Home
Los Angeles, Aug. 23 VP)
U.S. Attorney James M. Carter
said today that enough dynamite
was found under the home of
Gambler Mickey Cohen several
months ago to blow it to bits.
Carter told reporters the mat
ter was kept secret until today
when it was decided that no fed
eral offense was involved.
The federal official said he
has turned over details of the
bomb plot to District Attorney
William E. Simpson. Carter said
he was informed by explosive
experts that the "type found un
der Cohen's house was a 'bun-
galore torpedo' used by army
men to blow up barbed wire
barricades and entanglements."
'We traced the dynamite to
San Francisco," said Carter.
Finding no federal offense was
involved, we are turning the
matter over to the district at
torney." Carter said the dynamite was
discovered after Neddie Herbert,
Cohen henchman who was
wounded fatally in an ambush
July 20, found a fuse protruding
from a vent under Cohen s bed
room. Carter did not give the date
when the dynamite was found.
Another development in the
Cohen case came as the district
attorney's office reported that
Chief of Police William A. Wor-
ton complained that he was be
ing shadowed by "mysterious fi
gures." ,
Fear 2 Host in
Canadian Crash
Winnipeg, Man., Aug. 23 W)
The royal Canadian air force
announced today a search plane
has found the wreckage of a
two-engined plane reported miss
ing in northern Manitoba with
21 persons aboard since Sunday.
The announcement said there
was "no sign of life" around the
craft which had crashed and
burned 250 miles northeast of
Winnipeg. The plane took off
from Churchill, on Hudson Bay
for Winnipeg after an Arctic
circle swing to replace outpost
weather bureau personnel and
to bring sick Eskimos here for
hospitalization.
The RCAF announcement said
a paratroop-rescue team is pro
ceeding to the scene of the
crash, using three amphibious
planes.
Aboard the craft were seven
crew members, eight sick Eski
mos, a Canadian press reporter,
four meterological department
men and a woman physiotherap
ist. First reports placed 20 aboard
the plane but officials said today
another Eskimo was put aboard j
at the last minute at Churchill
- SOU MUT HIT MM
MHB1 MTM MTUT MM
twF
BEGGING
the towers of Rockefeller Center.
She and her husband haven't! . . . c
. , . .. i In a new note to the Soviet
been able to figure out a way Kovernment Yugoslavia told
to use the six-room prefabricat-,Mn(...u, th.t Premier Marshal
ed house. And they fear notice
from the U. S. internal revenue
department that they'll have to
pay taxes on the value, 15.000.served , stern warning to Ru.
So they have announced theyi.,.,. ,,.. , , lh.ir h,nH
would be glad to give back theoff the internal affajrs of tnis
house to the American women s;Balkan communist country.
voiuniary services in return iur
the 50 cents paid for the win
ning ticket.
. ... . . i ,. j.
The chief problem Is finding
... . .
place to move the house from
parking lot.
Mrs. Edna Birnbaum, an as
sistant supervisor of nurses at a
hospital, won- the house. She
and her husband. Alfred, 30, had
visions of a better life.
But their joy soon was ruined
by the prospects of the costs of
collapsing, moving, re-erecting
and connecting the house, plus
oarking lot fees of $50 a day
during the delay, and the in
come tax liability.
The Birnbaums offered un
successfully to give the house
back to the American women's
voluntary services for S3. 000.
Then the "lucky" couple tried
to sell the house, but prospec
tive purchasers shied away
when they learned the costs
ahead.
Birnbaum s brother, Rudolph,
a lawyer, was called on for
advice. He ran into a bunch of
headaches, and finally made the
50-cent offer last night.
The parking lot owner, Jerome
Voletsky, said he had arranged
to have the building dismantled
today and moved at his own ex
pense into storage at the Plain
field Lumber and Supply com
pany, Plainf ield, N. J., which
erected the "dream house" last
January.
The yellow "dream house"
was very much a white elephant
today,
Jensen Before Jury
Silverton Bound over to
the grand jury, commited on
being unable to furnish $2,500
bail, was Richard Lyle Jensen
after pleading guilty to the lar
ceny of a wrist watch and $9.50
in cash, from the C. C. Howell,
Jr., home, July 4. Apprehension
was determined when he took
the watch to the same location
for repairs from which it was
originally purchased.
Klamath Falls, Ore., Aug. 23
u.R Fire that raced through
nearly 10,000 acres of Shasta
and Modoc national forests in
northern California was brought
under control today by weary
firefighters who had battled in
the area since Saturday.
starts
Tomorrow!
TWO GIANT ADVENTURES
ON ONE
p V ' THE GREAT
rsKf TECHNICOLOR
I v rA action movie
S tgw of Al1 THE!
CaJk ' dwtnluf ror In Iht nnl
' ,B'rt"'n,"t',,
FRED HENRYr. SYLVIA
MacMURRAY FONDA SIDNEY.
"THE TRAIL F HG
LOHESOME PINE
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SPANKY Mtf ARLAN0 FUZZY KNIGHT Bsd a John Foi. Jt.'t FmoM
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A PARAMOUNT CHAMPION BROUGHT BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND
ADDED! COLOR CARTOON!
AIRMAIL FOX MOVIETONE NEWS!
ANGLO-U. S. BOMBERS ATTACK ENGLAND!
NAVY'S 600 MILE BANSHEE TAKES OFF
CARRIER ROOSEVELT! AKRON, OHIO,
15-YEAR-OLD WINS $5000 SOAP BOX DERBY!
Tito Willing to
Settle Issues
Belgrade, Aug. 23 (P) Yugo
slavia expressed willingness to
night to reach a settlement with
Russia on "all disputed ques
tions" between the two feuding
tm wiiiina in nH ihp hit-
t(,r fil!nt with the Kremlin.
At m. v..oMll.
The note was the first cooling
word in a war of words that
had become white hot in the
past two weeks. It was the ev-
. ; u un
,enth note in an exchange be
tween Belgrade and Moscow.
Yugoslavia formerly express
ed her "readiness to approach
the solution of all disputed ques
tions with the USSR in accord
ance with and in the spirit of the
international obligations under
taken by both governments."
There was no immediate indi
cation of what Moscow's reaction
would be to this extension of
the olive branch. Tito has-been
at odds with the Kremlin for 14
months.
The Moscow-directed comin-
form (communist international
information bureau) expelled
Tito and his Yugoslav commun
ists lor nationalistic deviations
from what Russian leaders re
gard as orthodox communism.
The Russians have called on the
Yugoslavs to overthrow Tito if
he did not change his policy. Ti
to has maintained his position,
however.
Wood is to be produced in
Ceylon from the balsa tree
which for a long time has been
considered not worth using.
THE POLICY AND AIM OF
hattuc,6 Chateau
IS TO FURNISH
FINEST ENTERTAINMENT
MOST CONGENIAL ATMOSPHERE
FRIENDLIEST SERVICE
FINEST FOOD
Don't Miss CORA EDDY, Singer of the Blues
'masterpiece "NsBiilcri. t 1 0"L"'XT)
OF AMAZEMENT- liilLHllllIf
with 10 mM trr!fl J". FSrTSTPTTMr
" TEMT MORE KB MKMxHini
2nd Ace Hit!
"MAKE MINE LAUGHS"
fJSSfiiirrh
' " YnU irt-
Ph. 3-3467 Matinee Daily From 1 P.M.
GREAT PROGRAM!
To Visit U. S The Shah of
Iran, Mohammed Reza Pah
levl (above), will visit the
United States in November for
several weeks to inspect farm
ing and industrial methods.
Dallas Water Breaks Repaired
Dallas After working all day
and well into the evening the
break in the intake pipe of the
Dallas water system was repair
ed. Early Tuesday, both reser
voirs with a capacity of 950,000
gallons were completely filled,
thus eliminating the threat of a
shortage.
liMU'i'.'Mli
ENDS TODAY!
Second feature
"BROTHERS IN THE
SADDLE"
With Tim Holt
RIGHT NOW!
PLUTO CARTOON
Warner Newt
61
The blood-
iL curd,in2
ty war cry
n that ,ed
screaming
p savages
Ws into battle!
mm
Tht screen's lop
thriller of the
ous Apache who blazed a path
of terror through the West's
flaming frontiers I
k PwMtmt Pichrt i
PRESTON ELLEN
FOSTER DREW
sx
WILLIAM HENRY-RALPH MORGAN
in. J
. GENE
BROUGHT
Parents Notified
Off School Opening
Notice has been issued by the
county superintendent's office
warning all parents of school
age children to prepare them to
enter school on opening day
September 12.
The notice states that the com
pulsory education law require
that every parent or guardian
shall be held responsible for and
required to lend all children of
school age under their control to
school regularly.
J. F. Remington, deputy sup
erintendent and attendance of
ficer, states that if for any rea
son a parent or guardian Is in
doubt as to the law informa
tion can be secured at the city
school office or at the county
office, phone 3-6783, Pacific
building, in Salem,
JNew
PIX
Theatre
Oregon
. Woodburn
O-SO-EAST SEATS
TUE., WED., AUG. 23-24
MY DEAR
SECRETARY
ENDS TODAY! 6:45 P.M.
Gene TlerneT '
"BELLE STARR"
Randolph Scott
"FRONTIER MARSHALL"
TOMORROW!
Ray Milland
"WINGS OVER
HONOLULU"
Randolph Scott
"CORVETTE K-225"
murder
ANDY
DEV1NE
LOCKHART
PARAMOUNT
CHAMPION
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!
TastmfTonlUl'B
P Frt ghrtlind PaBf Ej1
I Riici lr Iht Kl- M I
I "j" " I I
I Clifton Webb I f
I Shirley Temple I f
J "MR. BELVEDERE L
1 GOES TO COLLEGE" I jj
I I Virginia Mayo Iff
1 "FLAXY MARTIN" f
ENDS TODAY! (TUE.)
George Raft i
mm "OUTPOST IN MOROCCO"
Rory Calhoun
"MIRACULOUS JOURNEY"!
Crr erMilnM't 4iw4
SEE ante nnway