Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, September 14, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    Capital Adjournal Tfppie
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher
ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher
Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che
meketa St., Salem Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want
Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409.
Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and
The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use tor publication of all news dispatches
credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also
news published therein.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
By Carrier: Weekly, tie; Monthly, $1.00; One Tear. $12.00. By
Mall In Oregon: Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos.. S4.00; One Year. $8.00.
TJ. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mo,.. $6.00: Year. $12.
4 Salem OreRon, Wednesday, September 14, 1949
A Community Loss
In the passing of Dr. Harry H. dinger, Salem loses one
of its leading public spirited community builders and
a foremost citizen who contributed during his long career
far more than his share to public welfare and the develop
ment of the city.
During his entire life Dr. dinger served gratuitously SIPS FOR SUPPER
in public service but is best remembered lor nis years
as a member of the Salem school board, for 10 years its
chairman in the post-war period of the first world war,
when an extensive program of schoolhouse construction
was successfully carried out under his personal supervision.
TA INSTEAD Of US WASTING TIMC SITTING !p'Jl '"Wf'i
.ilERE, CAN'T YOU JUST HOLD HIS PLACE WS One..TwO..
"""l FOR HIM WHILE WE SKIP AROUND mt&rw 1 TwRee...R)o- Wl
VlD BRESLOWS' AND HE PICKS HVJ..SIX.. SJ
-yOUT SOME lfTTm 7,
pS
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
Treasury Secretary Snyder
Hardboiled in British Talks
By DREW PEARSON
Washington British Boil The British are boiling mad at Sec
retary of the Treasury Snyder for the iron-fisted way he is run
ning the Washington financial conference.
One British delegate has complained privately that Snyder is
treating them as if they were privates of the Missouri national
guard and he a.
gy GUILD
Wizard of Odds
colonel in Bat
tery D.
Wallgren r
H a r r Iman?
President Tru
man is think
ing of naming
Averell Harri-
man as chair
man of the Na-? :
tional Security frA '
Resources It
Board a vital- rr.
Well Named
By DON UPJOHN
Sat in awhile yesterday on a conclave of folk who were dis
rtissinff the matter of better control of rattle sometimes called
Far visioned in his outlook, Dr. dinger was a liberal bovine animals against certain diseases. It lasted quite awhile
conservative in his accomplishments and his sound judg- and a lot of talking was done. Not that it wasn't interesting,
ments were ruled by common sense. He always kept his which is aside from the point. It was one of those meetings we've
feet on the ground and never allowed prejudice or nys- ouen neara 01
teria to influence his actions. His honesty and sincerity but have never
and financial acumen paid the school district big divi- een "
dends. He stood high in his profession of dentistry,
he said, "because so many peo
ple have gotten me mixed up
with you."
ODD JOBS FOR PEOPLE
A unique business has sprung
up in Washington catering to
the whims of high officialdom.
The firm, called Courtesy As
sociates, digs up baby sitters for
such notables as Sen. Hubert
Humphrey of Minnesota and
Secretary of the Army Gordon
ly important post which has been Gray, picks out maids for others
vacant for nearly a year because such as Congressman Mendel
the senate vetoed Truman's old Rivers of South Carolina, gets
friend Ex-governor Mon Wall- army-navy football tickets for
gren of Washington. the Chinese embassy, and once
The president was all set to got tickets to a lecture on air
name Harriman last week, but power and atomic energy for
was persuaded to wait because the Soviet embassy after first
th? Democratic National com- clearing them with the state de
mittee is toying with the idea partment.
of appointing Wallgren to the The Netherlands embassy
job after congress leaves town, once hired Courtesy Associates
Japanese in U.S. Senate? to arrange a wedding reception.
Senator Butler of Nebraska was while a group of Guatemalan of
discussing Hawaiian statehood ficials are even being taught
with Admiral D. C. Ramsey, re- English, and a minor Washing
eentlv commander-in-chief in ton official hired Courtesy As-
the Pacific. sociates to coach his backward
AVERAGE COST FOR ATTENDING
.COlUuE IS 1,000 A YEAR.
I 7
It" J?
IF YOU RE RADIN6
THIS PAPER IN A BATHTUB, IT'S 19
TO I YOU RE IN AMERICA. TUBS
ARE SCARCE AROUND THE WORLD.
THiS O.CST01 CAM UUH FS0M
PiTTSMBoh.)
YOUR CHILD.
BY ODDS OF 3.000 TO I
WILL ENJOY REASONABLY GOOD
HEALTH DURING
BABYHOOD.
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
What's Wrong With Way
Women Dress? Women!
fore. We refer
In , , r V, t ni n
,. . . ... j tt- """" -""
Lr. Ulinger s civic activities coverea a wiue neiu. nt uarly called "a
represented Salem on the capitol planning commission bun session."
that erected the new capitol after the destruction of the
old by fire. He served long on the city council, as a mem- irresistible
ber of the water commission, on city library board, as a Impulse
member of the state parole board and as a member of M i n neapolis
ho pit-v hnvinir "Ammissinn. Sarah Pe-
PS
He was active in social and fraternal organizations,
terson was held br utjoha
the smell of sulphur in the air
brings on the expected, it won't
bother much at the circus. The
big top is plenty water proof
and Messrs Barnum & Bailey
and the Ringling brothers don't
get around to thes.- parts often
enough to let such a minor thing
as a fall shower interfere. Yea,
by gum, any Oregonian who'd
let a rain keep him away from
such an extravaganza is a dog
goned tenderfoot.
By HAL BOYLE
Nou Vnrk 4i A mere male came up today with an answer to
"Senator," said Ramsey, "how "-year-old daughter in the so- what's wrong with the way women dress,
would you like to have Senator cial graces. ne answer js women.
Koshimata sitting next to you Thls unusual firm was found- ' They are too dictated to." said Charles Le Maire. "They accept
in the U. S. Senate?" ed bv an enterprising young too mucn dictation as to what they should wear."
"I wouldn't like it." said But- ' ' w' ,n.aKe5 Le Marie is in
ler. " pm om .' Pica'"8 D'g snots. position to do,
n..t thf. lxhat mioht han. .coo .,,., a little dicta-
nen if we Bive statehood o Th i tln himself. As
, s v acnoic jii vt-aiiKaiiun u
II u t At wdiuiauc unci.
Hawaii." continued the Kepub- will be Lustron. the company 7 Twen- ,
hcan gentleman from Nebraska, that failed to solve the housina .!" '
Y ... - ""...-. on a disorderly
a charter member of the Cherrians, of the Masons, a past j,,. ,h,. inj,v fnr kirk.
exalted ruler of the Elks, of Rotary and other civic bodies. ing patrolman Warren Peterson wviiuation Advances
ills pleasant personality enoearea mm 10 a wiue cireie (no relation) when he stooped
of friends. He had the rare knack of getting along with over to pick up a pencil,
opponents without creating enmities, while standing pat
for his views and principles.
Dr. dinger will be greatly missed for he was a man
of many accomplishments and men of his caliber and
sound judgment are needed. He lived a well worth while
life. The sympathy of the community goes out to his
wife and bereaved family.
I ' ill T 9
fW.V
LATfca
McMinnville W The howl of
the coyote is becoming thinner
in Yamhill county. County pred
atory trapper Clarence Mullins
reports the beasts are on the
wane. This week he had a one
day kill of six five of them
large pups and the other a ma
ture coyote taken in the foot
hills west of Carlton.
However, we don't even ex
However, we'll confess the pect an invasion of the Wildcats
only reason for producing the from Linfield over McMinnville
Uo in the North Santiam can.von. ambitious residents masterpiece in th. foregoing
in the Detroit area are city conscious. They want to in- paragraph is that w happened
corporate a six-mile long stretch, including the present to think of something that would However, we doubt if the
... . . . r fVivm with "Mrftue" mil inn H muth urinrit rin their rintv anri
department store mannequin.
"A girl shouldn't pay any at
tention to what she hears of
Paris styles," he emphasized.
"She should think first of her
own shape, and dress to it. If
her figure doesn't go with what
4 she wants to wear, then she
could change her shape.
Le Maire has only a weary
sympathy for gals who think
they can achieve a pencil sil-
Weather Poem
These strong south winds,
They surely irk us.
And make us worried
About tomorrow's circus.
"The Japs are so numerous there shortage. The senate banking i." films he
already, and so closely knit, and and currency committee wants I ZaH of
n nn I n h nmh l ulls that thev l I,--... i T .... . runs a sla" OI
, lluvv ..usimi, spent me 2(0 clothes ex-
would soon get control of the millions of dollars borrowed .,,. Thev
high political posts." from the RFC. hVve'the pTe'aV
Unhappy French The French Dan O Connell, who delivers ant cnore f
anuarnmoni is nnt nt nil hnnnv government printing to the sen- l I
at the way France was excluded ator'i offices, faithfully collects fur pretties to girls like Bettv nouette wi,h a l'8ht corset,
from the American-British fi- 'he used stamps of senators and Grable Jeanne Crain. Dorothy "The excess flesh has to
nancial talks. France is the turn them over to a Catholic
most powerful friendly nation missionary society. They are
on the European continent, and then sold to foreign stamp coi
ner money and economy is just lectors or used to decorate
as tied up with Britain's as is handicraft.
i Mrs Rnnuuir r,alhA1l
ours possioiy more su. .- - - the averaee woman
, . .... . .. friends believe that Cardinal lne aVerase woman
airings on iho minuugn mc Snellen', hlo.t . h i
state department has announced fiuenced more bv her success.
Grable. Jeanne Crain, Dorothy lne excess nesn nas to go
McQuire, June Haver and Mau- somewhere," he sighed. "It has
reen O'Hara ' either up or down, for-
But the clothing of film star, ward or backward."
is designed to their own personal Thls- he explained, is why
architecture. This isn't true of tnere are so many girls around
wno iook liKe they nave either
Le Marie, a designer himself, v
said the biggest mistake most
Detroit and Martha Talk Merger
towns of Detroit and Idanha.
With so much activity going on In the canyon there,
this move to bring city services and programs to the area
is one that is only a matter of time before it comes about.
The voters there sooner or later will undoubtedly merge
their communities in order to handle the growing problems.
There Is the water problem, for instance. Every area
with growing pains runs into this problem. The Detroit
section will decide whether or not a municipal system or
a water district is better. The city, obviously, will mean
a municipal system.
There is some sentiment that a joining of forces will
enable a better bargaining position when it comes to
electrical power distribution and other services that have
to be expanded to meet the increased population.
The section is destined to become quite a resort place,
when the big dam is built and a lake is formed in the can
yon. The people seeking to consolidate the towns into one
have in mind proper city planning so development would
be on a coordinated basis.
Better police and fire protection are considerations,
too, for formation of a city there. A "protected city"
would mean a cut in fire insurance rates.
Those petitioning for the election, set now for October
13, have strong arguments on their side. The central
Willamette valley will watch with keen interest what the
391 voters in the precinct do.
After all, there will be an estimated 3500 workers in
the Detroit and Mill City area next spring on the Detroit
dam construction project. It would seem that now is the
logical time for the Detroit-Idanha area to decide on a
common basis for future development, instead of wait- .Dr.. ,rtD,,.
ing when things are humming so fast that no time OPEN FORUM
would be available to work out city development,
that it ie iitnflinif a efeel mill . . ...... 1.
........ . - . iui opposition to the appoint- i" iimuw uunu- A adV0Cate of the plunging
nsiderftat J'S.rseXnf T" S ambassadr to SPai" ly ' j V'' necVline e Maire has no moral
L?-1.-6 .f.au' " Vla.L5 ?I . han her stand on parochial -or ".try to pour herself in o objecUons to falsie!, but insists
a certain type oiaress merely he d(Jesn.t allow tnem , ,
because it looked good on a Twentieth Century Fox studio.
"That, I absolutely prohibit.
State Acheson agreed in writing scn0ols.
to review this project witnin
one year or just before the
(Copyright 1949)
Dancing Girls Too Much
Chicago (UR) "Tradln' " Christopher Janus, the man who
swapped a load of ball bearings for Hitler's 12-ton automobile,
returned here from Egypt after acquiring, among a raft of
other things, four dancing girls.
Janus mada the trip to Egypt to straighten out the esate
of a wealthy uncle. At Alexandria, he learned It consisted of
cash, a 10,000-acra cotton plantation, 200 camels, 4000 native
workers, and 12 dancing girls.
His share, after the slow-working Egyptian law machinery
got moving, was one-third of th estate, or some 3,300 acres
of land, 70 camels, and those four dancing girls.
But more trouble with the government, which was happy to
see him come but resented his going, forced him to swap his
Egyptian cash for the American rights to 10 Egyptian movies.
The first, "The Sleepless Man," will descend soon on Chicago
moviegoers. As for the dancing girls, the customs troubles
getting them out of th country just wouldn't be worth the
effort, h decided.
case it appears the steel mill MacKENZIE'S COLUMN
may fall into Stalin's hands be
cause Tito can't stand up to the'
Russians.
MORE AIR JUNKETS
The more you examine air
junkets by high public officials
and favored businessmen, the
Could the Democracies
Work With a Tito Bloc?
By DeWITT MacKENZIE
(iff) Foreign Afftir Analyst)
more it seems right that all such ,h, rft," v,Zl,i. i-i "'"?
t..u.. shirt L nn.n h. shaI Tlt' Yugoslavia Red dictator, with plotting to entice Rus
sia s eastern European satellites into an anti-Soviet alliance.
Whether this be true, the fact remains that Tito's defiance of
Moscow's domination is being followed by conspiracies and dis-
turbancesi
t Was Time to Stop
Maldan, Mass. (U.R) Norman Thurston was towing an auto
mobile when the tow-bar snapped and the driverless can
Sideswlped his own vehicle.
Knocked over a tree.
Felled an electric light pole.
Bowled over a gasoline station pump.
Stopped.
junkets should be open to pub
lie scrutiny.
If an airplane trip is secret,
then a lot of peculiar things
maw hannen at tha tavn.v.r. a v
... t k. i,,b. i. i,,.n among other
' I ... .. ..... junnv. ao J "
tied, then no one should object
in m mihli, lirilna th. l.ln
A lot of interesting flights Slovak and Hun
that no one knew anything about lumlllu
are now coming to light.
For instance, at the time Gen.
Harry Vaughan was interven
ing with the Air Force for spe
cial air -priority transportation
for John Maragon and his per-
fuma fcAmrianv nffinialc nnnth.P
general was doing the same thing also has shown
for Wall street. i,self elsewhere.
Brig. Gen. William H. Draper,
a high executive of the Dillon,
satellites.
The Czecho-
n i s t govern
ments claim tr
have uncovered
plans for actual
r e b e 1 1 ion b
force.
The ferment
Anything that isn't part of the
body anything that doesn't
move with the body it isn't
right.
"But some studios like them,"
he conceded. "Everybody in
their pictures wear them. I know
one actress who must have 50
bosoms at home."
No, he didn't care to name
her but fans can rest assured
it isn't Grable.
Le Maire designed wardrobes
OaWltl MkcDiU
With those definitions before for Broadway musicals and op
us, which brand of communism erated his own exclusive dress
would the democracies find it shop in Manhattan before going
easier to get along with? West.
The answer to that isn't dif- He sees fashions today as in
ficult, always assuming that confused state, but believes
Tito would stick to the tenets tne trend is toward "an era of
which he now advocates. quiet elegance."
One naturally would choose He personally favors clothing
the Tito communism as the less- that accents feminity, styles that
er of two evils because it pro- accent sex through subdued sug
fesses to honor the sanctity of gestion.
national sovereignty. Le Maire's own favorite dic-
Of course, any form of com- tales:
Last Foreign Spending Bill
Hop-Picking Wage Setting
(Editor's Note: Contributions to this column must b con
fined to 300 words and signed by th writer.)
To th Editor: A timely comment of F. D. Van Sweringen,
Senator Tom Connally of Texas, administration foreign
policy spokesman in the senate, has served notice that
after congress acts on the nresident's arms aid nrocrram executive secretary, Salem Building Trades Council, A. F. of L.
it will consider no further foreign spending projects this on hoP nd other harvest pay is well worth th attention of
year seasonal workers, crop growers and business men.
Connally as chairman of the senate foreign relations lrf,wb"r;e5' "ries peaches and other crop grower, took
Emwn.tCe thT'Kh, 'VhiCh "Utf P-0KrRT TSt ''I""' wobrkernfJehd r'ly" toV.- W, found that mos, grower.
o thrr' '" W"h hP' S,ablliZCd " were keenly aware that earning,
senate approves the arms hill. munri so renii ner rmund It .
His statement ruled out, at least until next year, any IZ I to be expected that they w"e low but wl,en "kpd ,or
further help for Britain that would involve a congres- would get a better picking price n increase the grower's story
sional okny. It also wrote off for this session the possi- than 3 cents. Under the hop- was that their agreement did not
bility of action on President Truman's "point four" pro- growers U.S. Dept of Agricul- permit an increase and that Wil-
gram for development of backward areas. u,r agreement, th grower is li,m Kimsey, Oregon's labor
Debate on the $1,314,100,000 military aid bill starts P"-" up ".V commissioner, woum nave to oe
in the senate Monday. Democratic Leader Scott Lucas, X. Th. Picker JoT. be". M" '""
111., predicted it would be annroved after less than a week's V.n"' .7h!,.p, ck" Lf -" r,,!d-
jl.. " - .. - n nl Dr v,..u .u ... Kimsev has lust told me
munism is totalitarian and sub- "No dress is as Important to
Well, supposing disaffection iects the indi
Read investment bankers, ar- among tht gatellites is growing tion. However, reports on the has underneath it. The big
ranged special priority trans- ,. ... Vmlav et.im inrfir-ate thai it .i.isi,. u i,i m.k..
, r i . . as me evidence indicates 1 ." ...t . v . .... ,llana
porta ion to Europe and back .iDinM.. ' more liberal 'he Individual is she doesn't dress herself for
fr?rCIareDnC..Dl110?' ,he head.uf , ?i than is Bolshevism. herself. She tries to follow a
Dillon, Read, and one of the How would the Democratic , , j . ..,
ZSFJTZr Germ8ny Wrld U ,,feC,ed " TU0 dW - StttZX Rothes don't make the wo-
General Draper even took his ucceed in forming an anti-Rus- side peacefully because that has man anyway they only make
boss to Nuremberg and back in lan Dl0CJ -oum lne western -"Jy oemons.raiea.
a super-duper air force plane nations work satisfactorily with
in which they were almost the such a Tito bloc?
only passengers. Coming back t reeking an answer to thes
to Tempelhof airport in Berlin, vi(ai question, we must note
Draper had the plane circle Ber- first lnat moscow and Yugosla-
lin for 20 minutes while he vla Ire working under two dif-
pointed out former factory site, ferent type, of communism.
that Dillon, Read had been in- D..i i j i o , .
terested in. and which had bee. Jh' " " ".b r?" d 's rBlshev-
ruinod by the war. whlcn c!,lls ,,or. world ,rev-
t .i, r-..i r. - lution in order to bring all na-
Latcr General Draper was e . . . . , ,
,a , h- ..j... t'oni into the Soviet bloc under
Vh. h., t.. p I . i direction of Moscow. This creed,
of the army bv James Forrestal. u- u , u ,
Vim., d j .. which works by strong-arm
n .-w iiuiii 1JI mill. III BU oc kU,
her talked about"
HEAD OP EXPEDITION WRITES:
Search for Noah's Ark
Ends in Admitted Failure
(Editor's Note: The following dispatch was written for
United Press by Dr. Aaron J. Smith, retired American mis
sionary from Greensboro, N. C, who led an expedition Just
returned from an unsuccessful 13-day search for Noah', ark
on Mt. Ararat in Turkey.)
fXPffif CONTENDS
Women Best Investors
Los Angeles UR When it come, to Investing, men hav la
climb In th bark seat, because women can beat them at their
own game, a Los Angele, Investment adviser contends.
"Take one common, fundamental of Investing, rallrd timing.'
advised investment expert Sydney H. Stroud. "Thl, (imply
means buying the right storks, annuities, real estate at th
right tim. Hav you ever observed a woman purchasing an
expensive out-of-srason Item unlrsa ah I, trying to Impress
someone? Women know price, and value, or els their budgets
won't balance.
"A woman, conversely, will not buy an Item merely beeaus
It is cheap. If th valu I, there and th prlr Is reasonable,
no obstacle can prevent her from reaching the counter.
"Vet men will buy stocks selling under IS a share, or marked-down
real sut In poor locations, merely becaus they ar
cheap."
Stroud punctuated the statement by adding: These buy,
usually bteom cheaper."
Mr ffimcev haa tuct Inlil mm
that quantity of perfectly good thlt tni, ,, not K lnd th h.
nop., yet ni, wage, tor p1ck- h unconfirmed reports that
ing a four-fifth crop ar lower ,ome grow,rl re ,lread pay.
because h. mu.t help pay for , 3,, c.nU d '
grower , expense of planting
ind cultivation. What a heck " V'T"8, "' .,h
of a et up labor leader a picture
This agreement also hit, th. ' h hop-wage aituation. Dean
picker a. to grade. Th. gr.d. Ohmans of lndependrnc. Hop
this year I, 6. which i. th. Grower, association a s .. r t ,
J thai nl.lr.F. .sn wtab. ,m O
tightest that it has ever been. : r .. . .,
Th. picker is warned
U.S. Inspector i, on
By DR. AARON J. SMITH
(Br united PrtM)
Istanbul, Turkey, Sept. 14 (U.R) We have searched for Noah's
ark and have failed to find it.
However, we feel that our research work has not been in vain.
that a weigh-up containing more
picker,, i, that $8 is more cor-
than 6 leaf or .tern will not " "' .
b. tolerated . . It Is to be hoped In th fu-
Th. writer with fiv. oth.r tu" nat mor. equitable meth-
average picker, mad. test pick- d "f wage setting can b. ar-
Ing, in four early and on. lat. riv'd V' Jh m.or wor'r
hop yard. Remits: An average
brings in the better deal for Sa-
of $3.00 per 9 hour dav. This 'r mr" "na. ""'"
doe. not count about J hour, ,or P"bllc d dunn ,tm"
daily going to yards, moving U,,I,,KUJ',C,,
section, and waiting for bui. WILL CARVER
Not: Averag. in late hop, wa, 1906 Center Street
leu than $6.00 thu, far. Salem
methods, holds that the sover
eignty of any Red nation rests
WEDDING NEAR BARKLEY in Moscow.
While the nation waits for The Tito brand of communism
Vice President Barklev to pod 'hu. far appears to belong to the
the question, hi, Negro chauf- common or garden variety with We did not come to Mt. Ararat to prove whether or not there
feur, Wilbur Walker, beat him whicn w were acquainted be- had ever been a flood or an ark God', word ha, declared that
to it. He married Edwina Ma. Iore noisnevism was Dorn. ine fact and our faitri remains un- "
Reeves at quiet church services Ti, communism stands for ab- lnaken in His unalterable word, eruption. We have found evl-
the other day. solute nationalism of the state Scientists have firmly declar- dences of such eruptions in and
Chauffeur Walket Invited th. ni th. retention of sovereign- (d that geological evidences ar around th area of the Ararat
Vice President to attend hi, wed- ty. ample to prove that there has mountains,
ding, but Barkley had a speak- Moscow call, its ism "Inter- been in the remote past an in- The third theory is that the ark
ing engagement out of town. national Communism." as op- undation by water of a universal possibly is covered with snow in
"I'd sure lik. to be there," posed to Tito's Nationalist State, scope. one of the deep crevices on th
north side where it has been
,. ... claimed to have been seen a.
There are three theorie, that recently a, last fall,
may account tor our failure to
locate the ark. Our, was the first and only
On is that it could hav de- fanl"' expedition which had
cayed because it mav have rested .,ne Pific purpose of search
on a lower altitude than we have ,or, fn's ark.
presumed ln almost every great inven-
t. iJ , v ,r,,st th" 0,hcr wil' ultimately
It could also hav been cover- bring to a successful finish what
d with lava during a volcanic we have begun.
a iha to $12 per day. My observation. i LI J CI' r !
hand and b,ckd by nmbr ( averag. lie Had o binKing reeling
Athol, Mass. Ol.Ri While reading a committal service In a
cemetery, the Rev. Gordon C. Capen experienced a sinking
sensation. It developed that an adjoining grav had collapsed
and he was knee-deep In earth.
Charged With Drunken Flying
Prince Rupert. B. C. m Aubrey Weslinghouse, president
of a Victoria, B. C, flying service, today faced a drunken
flying charge.
The rharg wa, believed th first of Its kind to rearh a
Canadian court H was remanded until Oct. 11.