JCaplt! Journal, Salem, Or., gaturda; October 22, 1949 Sight Wrecks Of 2 Planes Williami Air Force Base, Ariz. Oct. 22 " A rescue party tolled up a 6,000-foot mountain todav toward two burned-out wrecks, believed to be two of three navy fighter planes max disappeared four days ago. A civilian "rain-maker pilot' (aid there were "absolutely no inns of life" around the wrecks, which he spotted yesterday only four feet from the crest of a peak in the rugged ranges of Superior, Ariz. Darkness last night prevent ed an air force helicopter and a navy plane sent to the scene from confirming the report, made by Pilot Chuck Barnes of Phoenix Meanwhile, a SO-plane search continued for the three single seat F4U planes, missing on a ferry flight from El Paso, Tex., to Litchfield Park, Ariz. Barnes said the wreckage was "very recent" because it burned holes in the snow which first fell Wednesday, the day the planes disappeared. Navy offi cials said the area was in s direct line with Miami and Saf ford, Ariz., where ground wit nesses saw the three planes fly ing in formation. The missing pilots were Lt (Jg) George A. Hecker, Ports mouth, Va.; Ens. James T. Pil green, Shreveport, La., and Ens. John E. Laurence, Jr., Grosbeck, Tex. The dawn-to-dark search team Included paratroopers in a C-47 transport, a B-SO four-engine bomber, 25 single-engine air force planes, a dozen navy air craft and two civil air patrol squadrons. Men's Garden Flower Show A wide variety of blooms, shrubs and vegetables went on display Saturday afternoon when the Salem Men's Garden club opened its annual fall show. The exhibition, being held in the store room formerly occupied by Sears at State and High, will be in place through Sunday. Ent rance is from the High street side. While early frosts damaged some varieties of flowers, the display of chrysanthemums, as ters and roses is quite compre hensive. Fuchsias are well re pre aented, one of the three varieties being in excess of six feet tall. A number of commercial con cerns are cooperating in the fall exhibition with displays, The vegetable portion of the exhibition was small as compar ed with the balance of the dis play. f Dozens of Czech Priests Arrested Prague, Oct. 22 W) Church sources said today that commu nist-directed police raids of the last two weeks resulted in the arrest of dozens of Roman Cath olic priests and caused unrest in some Czechoslovak communities. These sources estimated that more than 300 priests are now in jail, most of them for oppos ing the government's new church control law which makes them civil servants and gives the state control over all church appoint ments and financinl and admin istrative affairs. The police action against priests, which was stepped up to break resistance to the govern ment's church control schemes. was separate from the wide spread roundups of small busi nessmen which sent thousands of middle class elements to pri son and forced labor camps, Onions lrft in the irrnunri I over winter will sprout of themselves vrs all in the spring, even before the snow is gone, giving early greens. tasty IN PERSON . "T" TEXAS TYLER MON., OCT. 24th Glenwood Ballroom SALEM DANCE TONIGHT Glenn ' Woodry's Orchestra SILVERTON ARMORY "NUFF SAID" '''! OIL Forum Leader Harold Bartsch, lumberman, elected president of the Silverton Chamber of Commerce this week. (Curtesy Appeal Trib une). City Folks Kick On Egg Prices Washington, Oct. 22 OI.Ri The department of agriculture has been getting letters from city folks protesting the high price of eggs. All blame the government price support program. Under the program, the gov ernment bought more than 2,- 000,000,000 eggs during the first eight months of the year. The eggs were in powder form from drying plants in 12 states. To protestors against high prices, the department has this reply: 1. If the government stopped its egg buying now, egg prices in cities wouldn't be any cheap er. 2. The purchases are only ac complishing what the law re quires holding farm prices of eggs on a national average at a level equal to the mandatory support level. Since May, 1948, the govern ment has had a standing offer to buy at fixed prices all the egg powder processors want to turn over to it. The only condition is that the processors pay the far mer a floor price of at least 35 cents a dozen. The government still is pick ing up eggs under this 35 cent support program. The protest- ants are consumers who have to pay 75 to 90 cents a dozen. Allen to Be Envoy To Yugoslavia Washington, Oct. 22 W) The United States is expected to name Assistant Secretary of State George V. Allen ambas sador to Yugoslavia as part of the western campaign to stiffen Marshal Tito's resistance to Mos cow. Infodmed liplomatic officials said Allen is Secretary of State Acheson's choice for the key cold war post now held by the ailing Cavendish Cannon. Allen is a former ambassador to Iran. There he had two years of first-hand experience in a dis trustful neighbor country of So viet Russia at a time when the relations between Iran and Mos cow were particularly critical. Offer Solution for Schooll Fraternities Portland, Oct. 22 M"v The parents who want to keep high school fraternities and sororities outlined a plan today that they hope will gain school board ap proval. The school district hopes to abolish all secret organizations in high schools. The committee of parents, whose youngsters belong to high school fraternities, worked out a possible compromise which would take the "secret" label off, but keep the groups exclu sive. r DANCE SATURDAY NITE Aumsville Pavilion Music by Tommy KriTlnh and His West Coast Kaniblrri In Aumsville 10 Miles S. .. of Salem 9:30-12:30 XX V DANCE To the Musle of Lee and the Melody Ramblers' ALBANY ARMORY Every Saturday Night Admission 75c, Inc. tax Semi-Modern --------k- COMMUNITY CHEST Benefit Dance TONITE Merlain Dancing School 15J S. Liberty Modern Music by THE PLAYBOYS Adm. 75c Per Person Alaska Salmon Pack Very High Seattle, Oct. 22 W Alaska's 1949 salmon pack was reported today at the highest figure since 1944, but the dollar value was off 17 per cent from last year's record high. The U. S. fish and wildlife servcie reported the pack at 4. 375,147 cases, compared with 3,974,540 last year. The value was computed at approximately $80,000,000, com pared with last year's record $96,000,000. The value estimate is on the basis of price to job bers as listed by the salmon brokerage firm of McGovern and McGovern. E. B. McGovern cited two rea sons for the drop in total value for the bigger pack: (1) general reduction in salmon prices; 'or example pinks were $23 to $24 a case a year ago and $10 this year; and (2) a sharp reduction in the pack of high priced salmon and an increase in the lower priced pinks. The boost in the 194S pack was in southeastern Alaska where the final total was 2,511, 274 cases, compared with 1,283, 791 last year and l,090"6 in 1947. The southeastern pack was 95 per cent above last year, while the pack of other areas dropped. The sharpest fall-olf was in Bristol bay where tne pack, which ended in August, was only 563,020 compared with 1,316,168 last year. There were 119 canneries op erating In the territory this year compared with 124 last year and 115 in 1947. 2 Hunters Die In Plane Crash Klamath Falls, Or., Oct. 22 (IP) A duck hunting trip plan ned by two well known San Ga briel, Calif., hunters and their Klamath Falls pilot ended trag ically shortly after this morning when the plane crashed on the Clark Fensler ranch near Tule lake, claiming the lives of two men. The third in Klamath valley hospital here Is critically burn ed. Dead are; Claude Stephens, pilot and Weyerhaeuser timber company employe. valmont Kittle, San Gabriel business man. Critically burned is John Har vey Kittle, retired San Gabriel resident. Both Kittle and Stephens were burned beyond recognition and at 1:30 this afternoon their charred bodies remained in the plane, overturned in a drainage ditch near the Fensler home. John Kittle, thrown from the flaming plane into the ditch, was pulled free by Jack Fensler and Herbert Kirby, who with Ed Fensler, witnessed the crash only about 150 yards in back of the Fensler home. Jack and Herbert ran to the scene but were able only to aid the one man. The other two were clearly visible in the burning craft. One was still screaming and fighting to free himself from the flames. The other, his head split open, appeared uncon scious. The committee proposed that fraternity pins be allowed; haz ing be banned; all meetings be chaperoned, and open at any time to inspection by a school representative. 90c Sif 90c SATURDAY & SUNDAY Good Home Cooking $1.00 T-BONE STEAKS $1.00 THE SNACK SHOP 17th and Center St. OLD TIME DANCE Every Saturday Night Over Western Auto tS9 Court 8t Join the crowd and have a good time. Musle By BEN'S ORCHESTRA PUBLIC DANCE Admission 60c Ine. Tai DANCE Every Saturday Night PEDEE HALL PEEDEE, OREGON MUSIC BY WONDER VALLEY BOYS 9:30 to 1A.M. LATE SPORTS FOOTBALL FINALS Cornell 14, Princeton 12. Yalt 14, Holy Cross 7. Michigan State 24. Penn State 0. Rutgtrs 35, Colgate 13. Albright 7, Franklin & Marshall 0. Coast Guard 36. Norwich 0. Delaware 7, LaFayette 0. Amherst 14, Wesleyan 7. Army 63. Columbia 6. Dartmouth 27, Harvard 13. Booton University ?8. NYU 0. Ohio State 21, Wisconsin 0. Arnold 24, Kings Point 14. Vermont 13, New Hampshire . Hillsdale 13. Hope . Upsala 20, Susquehanna 0. Fordham 47, Syracuse 21. Penn 28, Navy 7. Illinois 19. Purdue 0. Virginia 32, VMW 13. Duke 66. Virginia Tech 7. Maryland 14, North Carolina State . Iowa 28, Northwestern 31, Lady Godiva's Statue Unveiled Coventry, Eng., Oct. 22 W) Lady Godiva was undraped again today and this time every body watched. The bronze statue of the fam ous lady, who 900 years ago rode naked through the streets of this town, gave up her veils of Brit ish and American flags in an Impressive public unveiling cer emony. Mrs. Lewis Douglas, wife of the American ambassador, pull the string that loosed the cov ering as the bells of blitzed St. Michael's cathedral tolled noon. But Lady Godiva appeared sud denly modest. The flags stuck to her when the cord was pulled and workmen had to prod them down with long poles. It was the first statue the townspeople had ever had of their historic benefactress. Leg end has it that at noon one day 900 years ago she rode forth naked in the streets, covered by her own long tresses, to force her noble husband, Leofric, earl of Mercia, to lower the taxes. On that occasion the towns people went indoors to let their beautiful lady pass unseen. But one guy peeped and became the almost equally famous peeping Tom. The story has it that the demonstration worked and the taxes were lowered. Everybody peeped today at the 19-foot, two-ton statue of the lady, riding side-saddle, and slightly modest in her long hair, standing In a new square which had been blitzed out by Nazi bombers in World War II. The statue, gift of a local resident, cost $56,000 and is the work of Sir William Reid Dick. Some hoped as they watched in the cold drizzle, that this second appearance of Lady Godiva would mean lower taxes once again. Another Hunting Death Cottage Grove, Oct. 22 (IP) Word was received here Satur day morning of the death r W. Marvin Harpole, prominent Cot tage Grove citizen, who died of a heart attack Friday evening while hunting in eastern Ore gon. He was a member of a party of Cottage Grove hunters. The Jackson Memorial Re search laboratory at Bar Harbor, Maine, has the world's oldest pure-bred strain of mice, cov ering 220 generations. It was starte din 1909. The same num ber of generations in men would have had to start in 3500 B.C. i i7n - Major Hits! Richard Widmark Linda Darnell in "SLATTERY'S HURRICANE" and ALAN LADD in "THE GREAT GATSBY" DANCING TONITE to Wayne Strachan's Music VFW HALL Hood and Church St. LEGIONNAIRES i Special Sunday Dollar Dinner Tomato or Fruit Juice Cocktail Soup Salad Pot Roast and Potato Pancake Rolls and Butter Choice of Dessert Coffee or Tea Open 2:00 to 9:30 P.M. All Legionnaires, Auxiliary Members and Their Guests Phone J-76M 56S0 So. Commercial St. Windy Storm On Great Lakes . (Br tht Associated PrejJt Rainy, windy weather, accom panied by sharp drops In tem perature passed over the Great Lakes region today and drove eastward rapidly. The storm was pushed along on west winds which reached 63 miles an hour at Gladwin, MlJi , and developed 45 to 50 mile vel ocity last night over northern Illinois. Behind the disturbance, tem peratures were rising in the northern Rockies and northern plains after sub-freezing seiz ures. The southern plains and the southern Rocky mountain region had one of the coolest nights this fall. The mercury reached 14 degrees at Otto, N Mex., 15 at Eagle, Colo., and 27 at Garden City, Kans. Texas tornadoes hit the north ern edge of Abilene and near Avery yesterday, killing a school teacher, injuring four others and causing damage to buildings and power lines. A heavy snow blanket, as deep as 15 inches at Billings, Mont., remained in the wake of the blustery disturbance driving toward the east coast. Last Bumps Off Scope Mirror Palomar, Calif., Oct. 22 W) The last microscopic bumps on the face of t h e 200-inch Hale telescope mirror have been re moved, and the giant star-came ra soon will begin searching the twin corridors of space and time for events that happened a bil lion years ago. The big mirror, which pick up pinpoints of light originating more than a billion light years away, will be coated with re flecting aluminum before it is replaced in the telescope tube. (A light year is the distance light, moving at the rate of 186, 000 miles a second, travels in a year). The coating may take three weeks or it may require three months, says Dr. Ira S. Bowen, director of the Mt. Wilson and Palomar observatories. Grand Opening "ORDERS TO TAKE OUT" China Cafe Open Daily, 4:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. WE SERVE CHINESE & AMERICAN DISHES Phone 2-6596 2055 Fairgrounds Road Salem, Oregon MSMSh SIMMY, MO.NDAV MY DREAM; IS TOURS (toe it jack 1 DAYtCARSON -BOWMAN TONIGHT "Loftded PloloJi" "Kuim Clljr KIMr" STARTS SUNDAY TEA lfM v BARRYi AtiHBLYTH MOHl I for"5 "We hope the telescope will be back in operation well before the end of next year, he said. The mirror, essential part of the largest telescope in the world, was removed for more polishing last May, after a year of testing showed the outer 18 inches of its surface was as much as 20 millionths of an inch too high. 'It had been deliberately left high because we had anticipated some sag when it was placed in the telescope," Dr. Bowen ex plained. "When this sag did not develop to the extent we had an ticipated, we decided to do some additional work on it." Soviet Building 10 Rocket Sites Vienna, Austria, Oct. 22 U.R) Russia has built at least 10 rocket-launching sites along the Romanian-Yugoslav borler western diplomatic sources said today. The sources said their infor mation came from "highly re liable" informants in the Ro manian army. The reports were "double-checked" before beinb accepted, they said. The launching sites are equip ped to handle rockets of both the V-l and V-2 types devel oped by the Germans shortly be fore the war ended, the reports said. "Special food larders and am munition depots also are being built on the Rumanian side of the Romania-Yugoslav border,' the reports said. "Men aged 18 to 65 are being conscripted in these frontier areas to build the depots as well as fortification lines." The reports said the Russian work had been hampered by re peated partisan attacks on sup ply trains, presumably made by Romanian adherents of Mar shal Tito of Yugoslavia. The Soviets also have trans formed a number of Albanian islands into submarine bases and automatic torpedo launching sites, the reports said, to out flank Yugoslavia from the sea. GLENWOOD BALLROOM SALEM FRIDAY, Oct 28 ' AMHtCA'S i.i . .: i- a&SIN PERSON! ft FREDDIE SLACK J) AND HIS ORCHESTRA POPULAR PRICES $1.00 with Coupon (plus tax) 6 HURRY. SAI.FM . s Disney's "ICHABOD & MR. TOAD" and "Rustlers" HBfB.HlBJI.Bl -mm Tomorrow! The producer and cast of "Casablanca' score onother hit! UiHiliiiiji Excitement-Jammed Thriller .1 m.. n.:t nj. 7 V & DISNEY CARTOON Latent Warner New Truman Cruising Down Potomac Washington, Oct. 22 MV- President Truman was cruising down the Potomac today and putting the final polish on a for eign policy speech. The presidential yacht Wil liamsburg anchored last night at Blakistone Island in the lower Potomac, ready to push off this morning for the mouth of the Patuxent river. Mr. Truman's party will re turn to Washington Sunday aft ernoon. The foreign policy speech is to be delivered Monday at the laying of the cornerstone of the United Nations building in New York. Bird Hunter Killed By Companion's Shot Klamath Falls, Oct. 22 W Oregon's bird-hunting season is one day old. One man is dead. Harvey McLing, 26, Klamath Falls, was wounded fatally by a shotgun blast from a fellow hunter's gun yesterday. Sgt. Earl Tichenor of the state police said McLing was one of five hunters moving in a semi circle through a field in the nearby Midland area. When a pheasant boomed out of the grass, someone fired. McLing fell. Tichenor said Robert Wright McFarland, Portland, admitted firing the shot. He said Mc Farland was not being held. Asks Cessation of Taping Fire Hydrants An appeal was made Satur day by E. L. Smith, an officer of the Salem fire department for youngsters of the city to cease defacing and removing ENDS TODAY! "MIGHTY JOE YOUNG" "TUCSON" Starts Tomorrow Cont. 1:45 BROADWAY'S I No. 1 I SPENCER TRACY STAGS "Wl PlAY NJW is now Ny ON THE d Ml SECOND FEATURE "SHAMROCK HILL" Peggy Ryan, Ray McDonald b ENDS TONIGHT! Crime Squad! uvenv in . .Ill TilTOJV' Z Li m jfciA y nil rr i i i' (If w 'scotch lite" tape from fire fcy. drants. The tape was donated to the department as the result of a public service drive by the Sa lem Lions club. It makes the hydrants read ily visible for firemen as well as pedestrians and autoisLi at, night, and enables the firen-en to locate the nearest hydrant more quickly in emergencies. Smith said that the tape had been removed or destroyed in many instances and appealed to the youngsters believed to be re sponsible to cease their vandal ism. Russia's Amforg Corp. Indicted by Jury Washington, Oct. 22 UP) A federal grand jury Friday Indic ted Soviet Russia's Amtorg trad ing corporation on charges of violation the foreign agents reg istration act. Attorney General J. Howard McGrath announced the return of the indictment by a grand jury here. Amtorg represents Russion commercial interests in the United States. McGrath said six officers of the corporation also were in dicted. They are charged with omitting to file with the Justice department a registration state ment as an agent of the soviet government. 1 rrlMMHil Mat. Daily From 1 P.MJ NOW SHOWING! A Nil Holt PrMlKtM . KlknM iy 20m (Man-la THRILL CO-HIT! DEAN JAGGER LT lrfahrf.. Cont From 1 P.M. NOW! EXCITING! First Salem Showing! FIRST RUN CO-HIT! Salcm'i Show Bargain! 2 S 35c . Ends Today! Cont Shows! "OMOO OMOO" The Shark God Whip Wilson "HAUNTED TRAILS" TOMORROW! Don (Red) Barry "RINGSIDE" Charles Starrett Smiley Burnette "LARAMIE" STARTS AT 6:15 P.M. Paulette Goddard Oscar Homolka Brod Crawford "ANNA LUCASTA" Petty Cummins Charles Cobnrn In Technicolor "GREEN GRASS OF WYOMING" i W LST TIMES TONITE! STARTS AT 6:45 P.M. I 1 1 Linda Darnell I 1 1 Richard Widmark I 1 1 Veronica Lake I j I I "SLATTERY'S I J II HURRICANE" If III AlanLadd ill III "GREAT GATSBY" I Betty Field mi I l,i v a.i nni, 11 A tKV I' at ... t !'f 11 If J lfWl