2 Capital Journal, Salmi, Ore., Tuesday, October 25, 1949 Asks Point 4 For Homeland Washington, Oct. 25 W) Sen ator Millikin (R-Colo) called to day lor "a domeatic point four' instead of President Truman's renewed proposal for govern ment protection on U.S. invest' menu abroad. Mr. Truman aaid in dedicat ing the United Nations building cornerstone in New York yes terday he will ask congress in January to give high priority to proposals to speed American technical aid and investments in the world's backward areas. This was point four of a world program the president outlined in his inaugural address last January. To carry it out, bills author izing the export-import bank to guarantee American foreign in vestments against certain risks will be ready for action by both houses when they return next year. Millikin, who heads the con ference of all republican sena tors, served notice there will be a fight over the issue. "I'd much rather see a do mestic point four," the Colorado senator told reporters. "We had better start taking some of the handicaps off capital at home, by incentive tax reductions and oth er methods, before we go into that field abroad." Chiang Calls for Ail-Out War Hong Kong. Oct. 25 (IP) Gen eralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek called today for "total mobiliza tion" against the triumphant Chinese communists because, he said, they will stop at nothing His message coincided with reports of three high level con ferences to see what the nation alists can do to halt the Red of fensive on all fronts. Chiang spoke at his headquar ters on Formosa on the fourth anniversary of China's libera tion from the Japanese. He said the big island off the south cen tral coast was destined to be a citadel of resistance against "Russian Imperialistic designs." "Russian Imperialism, like Japanese imperialism, endeav ors to grab Taiwan (Formosa)," he said. "It is seeking to do this on one hand to complete its con trol of the entire Chinese na tion and on the other to turn it into the most strategic forward echelon in its Invasion of the western Pacific." Chinese sources here said Gen. .Pat Chung-Hsi, in a meeting with nationalist military advis ers yesterday, approved revised strategy for the southwest China campaign. New plans include a substan tial increase of government forces along the Kwangsi Kwangtung border. Efforts will be made to block the Red pincer movement against the Kweilin area from the north and couth east New Owners for Meat Market The Tatman & Anderson meat market at Krueger's Kash Karry, at Center and Lancaster, has been purchased by Lloyd H. Reinwald and Robert F. Pitzer, Sr. The two new owners are well known as Salem meat cut ters. Reinwald has lived in Salem since 1924 and his home it at 3170 South Commercial. He at tended Salem schools, and in World War II served 41 months In the army. His first experi ence in the meat business was with the Werner market, and for the last 2'i years he has been wllh the Paramount Market. Pitzer has been a Salem resi dent throughout his life and lives at 774 South 18th street. Dur ing the war he was for 38 months with the army air force. His first experience was at Nep tune's market, and since then he has been manager of several meat markets. He has been with the State Street Market in re cent years. Court Rules on Trial To Be Enforced In granting a motion for con tinuance Tuesday in the case of Pemberton vs. Coville which had been set for trial in his court to start Wednesday morn ing Judge Rex Kimmell said that while it was being granted in this Instance in the future it will be very difficult for attor PRIZES FOR 1 1ST COSTUMES! CONTESTS! CARTOONS! THRILLING SPOOK FEATURE! -GRAND THEATRE- neys to get continuances of cas es which have been set for trial, "With the double Jury plan now in operation it will be re quisite for attorneys to make a very substantial and convincing showing of very valid reasons before continuances are granted In the future," he said. "The ex pense involved is too great and the necessity must be very ap parent." In the instant continuance it was granted on the affidavit of a physician showing a material witness was in a physical con dition which would not permit his appearance. Morse Hits at Defense Row. Washington, Oct. 25 U.R) Sen. Wayne Morse (R., Ore.) to day called for an overhauling of the unification law to strength en the armed forces and put an end to inter-service strife. Morse said in an interview he believes a senate armed services subcommittee should call all parties concerned into executive session to determine "what needs to be done" to improve unification. "I am convinced that a strong unification law is essential to both our national security and to economy in government," Morse said. The Oregon senator, a mem ber of the armed services com mittee, has long been an advo cate of a more extensive mer ger of the armed forces than has been accomplished to date. It must be made clear to all branches of the service," he said, 'that the people of this country are entitled to full cooperation of each of the three branches." He said the "time is gone for ever" when any one branch of the service, "can conduct itself as though it were an autono mous military establishment." Discharges for Drafted Men Montgomery, Ala., Oct. 25 W) Secretary of the Army Gray today disclosed plans to offer discharges from the army to 30,000 men who entered service under the draft law. 'Upon completion of 12 months' service, these men will be offered immediate separation beginning December 1," Gray said in a speech prepared for the annual conference of the Na tional Guard association. "We anticipate that most of these men will take advantage of our offer." These men had entered .under the draft law's requirement for 21 months' service. Gray said the earlier release had been ap proved by Secretary of Defense Johnson, who has power under the law to shorten the period of service. The army secretary made the announcement in telling of steps being taken to reduce the army from 656,000 men to 630,000 by next February. That part of his speech which dealt with offering earlier dis charges to the 30,000 follows: "We have eliminated one-year enlistments, we have raised the GCT (general classification tests) entrance requirements from 80 to 90, and we plan to return approximately 3,300 re serve officers to inactive duty. "The main cutback in strength will be accomplished, however and this is the first announce ment concerning this action the main cutback will be ac complished by release of 21- month inductees and enlistees who came into the army as a result of the selective service law." Gray said the army. In releas ing the men before their orgi nally stipulated term was up, was given new proof that it would not abuse the draft law. Chewing Gum May Empty Dental Office Palm Springs, Calif., Oct. 25 iP) A gum chew a day will keep the dentist away. This may be the slogan of new chewing gums which will be on the market within a month, says Dr. Robert G. Kesel professor of dentistry at the University of Illinois and developer of am moniated dentrifices. Dr. Kesel told 200 fellow den tists at the sixth annual dental medicine seminar here yester day that the new gum will con tain dibasic ammonium phos phate and urea. They are the bacteria killing ingredients found in many new tooth pastes and powders. Get Ready For Our Big Saturday Midnite Party! Tavern Owners Plan Training The board of directors of the Oregon Tavern Owners' associ ation, meeting in Portland Mon day, voted to establish a class of instruction for new tavern licensees. Under the tutelage of compe tent persons they will be in structed in the state liquor con trol laws and regulations, and in all sanitary requirements for tavern operation. With the cooperation of the tavern owners' association the liquor control commission, it was reported at the meeting, has decided to compile a manual of the liquor laws and regulations in laymen's language which will be distributed to all licensees in the state. The association employs a field man who gives full time to checking on taverns and their operating methods and reports directly to Oren Campbell, sec retary-manager of the associa tion. Salem men attending the meeting were Noble Depen- dchner, a -member of the board, and Ethan Grant, editor of Ore gon Tavern News. Red Armies in East Europe London, Oct. 25'u.R) Russia has moved 235,000 fresh troops into eastern Europe in the past few months to help stamp out a vast "Titoist" underground as effective as the French war-time Maquis, a western intelligence source said today. The source, who returned from the Balkans during the past week, said the underground is composed chiefly of anti-Soviet communists whose immedi ate aim is to terrorize the Corn- inform leaders of their own countries. He said many minor Comin- form officials have been mur dered recently in Bulgaria, Ro mania, and Hungary and that only last month an attempt to assassinate President Klement Gottwald of Czechoslovakia fail ed "by a few minutes." The source, who cannot be identified, said Gottwald and other Czechoslovak of f 1 c 1 a 1 s were enroule to northwestern Bohemia by train. A bomb ex ploded on the track a few min utes before their train reached the town of Louny. Gottwald cancelled a scheduled speech and returned to Prague, the source said. Jet Airliner's Initial Flinht London, Oct. 25 W) The world's first jet airliner, the De Havilland Comet, whipped from London to Tripoli, North Africa, and back on a maiden overseas flight today at an average speed of about 450 miles an hour. The 36-passenger plane flew the 1490 miles from London to Sastel Benito, Tripoli, in three hours, 23 minutes, an average speed of about 440 miles an hour. After a two-hour refueling stop and a check of instruments, the silver plane zoomed back to London in three hours, 13 min utes, at an average speed of about 463 miles an hour. The 36-passenger Comet is in tended for transatlantic service to New York in 1952 or 1953. CIO Considers Purging Reds Cleveland, Oct. 25 (A The CIO executive board met to de cide today whether the CIO de liberately is to rid itself of 1, 000,000 members under left- wing union leadership. The answer almost certainly would be an anxious "no" if there is any way to woo left wing followers away from the rebellious forces. The CIO has a maximum of 8,000.000 members, and Presi-I dent Philip Murray indicated he wants to keep as many of those under his banner as possible. But the so-called left-wing movement, spearheaded by a team of resourceful leaders in the United Electrical Workers (UE), and by a canny Harry Bridges of the International Longshoremen's and Warehouse men's union, was expected to put up a serious challenge. Murray s Involvement in an economy-rending strike of 558,- far Ifn4 Mil! i FtClAt AOINT" I Cl'4 4 "4 . It li Meet 'Air-Born" Son U. S. Air Force Sgt James C. Park er of Alderson, W. Va., holds his son, Miodrag, horn early this week on airliner 19,000 feet up and 400 miles out over the Atlantic ocean on flight from New York, at reunion with his wife in nursery of country hospital at Shannon, Ireland. The soldier's wife, Darinka( Yugoslav-born GI bride, selected the name Miodrag which is Slav name meaning "Darling" but Sgt. Parker added that he thinks the boy should have good American name like Bill, Tom or Jack, too. (AP Wirephoto via radio from London) 000 steelworkers muddled the left-right war which has plagued the CIO for months. The once clear-cut lines be tween the left-wing and anti communist right-wing forces in the CIO were somewhat confus ed by Murray's pressing desire for a settlement in the 25-day- old steel strike. The UE executive board in New York voted to throw its financial resources behind both the steel and coal strikes fol lowing the earlier idea of John L, Lewis. No Xmas Trees From Christmas Washington, Oct. 25 VP) The post office says it's sorry but the postmaster at Christmas Fla., has to quit stamping tiny green Christmas trees on let ters mailed from there. Even an appeal from a sena tor failed today to get an excep tion to the regulations in favor of the spirit of St. Nicholas But if the folks from Christ mas want evergreens on their mail, they'll have to put them on, officials said firmly today The Chamber of Commerce can set up a booth for that purpose, they said, but the regulations forbid postmasters to take time to dress up envelopes. Mrs. Wanneta S. Tucker has been adding the tiny trees each holiday season for 15 years, ever since she became postmas ter. But her idea was too well liked. Snowed under by 150.000 pieces of mail last Christmas. she called for more help with the rubber stamp. The post office raised the town from fourth class status to third, boosting Mrs. Tucker's pay, and then began checking up on its Yuletide popularity. The officials explained today that with some 42.000 post of fices, some of them just aching to use a special stamping, they don't dare make exceptions. Senator Holland (D-Fla.) un dertook a postman-gpare-thal-tree campaign. The home of the marine corps commandant, built in 1803, is known as the oldest building in Washington, D C. mimm Now Showinr Open 6:45 ENDS TODAY Second Feature "SHAMROCK HILL" Peggy Ryan, Ray McDonald MounMrssai ,, c' tTACKPUf KNOW ""-T"" WTHESntPNI JOlnu "Ulii I DINE and DANCE MARSHALL'S 3815 State Street FORMAL OPENING, THURSDAY, OCT. 27th Full Course Dinners, Dancing The well known Stuffy McDoniel of the piono. Tobies, booths and bar H A. M. to 1 A. M. Business men's luncheons. "ONE OF SALEM SUBURBAN'S BEST" Now owned by Frank P. Morsholl Air Conditioned Clean Good Food Ample Space for Parking Open Every doy but Wednesday Coal Shortage Growing Acute Chicago, Oct. 25 (If) A spokesman for retail coal deal ers said today that a national emergency exists in the supply of soft coal for home heating. He urged President Truman to act at once to end the coal strike. The appeal for "immediate steps" by the president came from the American Retail Coal association. It said that with colder weather coming the coal supply "emergency is far great er" than the steel strike situa tion. In a long telegram to the pres ident, J. Atlee Schafer of Cleve land, president of the association said: "In hundreds of communities there is no supply of domestic fuel available for thousands of customers dependent upon our industry for fuel. "Colder weather is on its way. Only the unseasonable weather of October to date, far warmer than normal, has prevented an earlier crisis. "We feel that a national emer-. gency in the bituminous coal con suming area exists right now." Failure by the president to act immediately, Schafer said, "will result in tragic consequences for the people of the United States." Mike Elliott Hunting Elk Prineville, Oct. 25 (At Mike Elliott, recalled sheriff of Mult nomah county, is thinking about elk, not politics. He and his friend, James Dady. spent the night here and this morning said they were going elk hunting in Grant county. Pa.0 once 1 beatre NOW SHOWING TEA BARRVi emcsosw AUHBiVTH msnBTzeefifiiD UHUFrXOtfli ,yT '.nrt f ' Miami I Maml Teachers Hold Final Sessions The second and concluding day of the high school and ele mentary school conference Tues day was devoted in the main to departmental meetings during the forenoon hours. On the high school level these meetings were devoted to a va riety of subjects including ad ministration, agriculture, art, business education, foreign lan guages, health and physical edu cation, home economics and mu sic. The elementary teachers dis cussed social studies. E. A. Carleton, principal of Salem senior high, presided dur ing the afternoon conference held in the auditorium. A panel discussion devoted to "Private Industry and the Conservation Problem," took up much of the time. Panel members were Wal ter DeLong, of the Weyerhaeus er Lumber company and Art King, soil conservationist of the OSC extension service. To Curb Dance Hall Licenses The county court Tuesday de clared a policy of issuing no more special permits for dance hall licenses and in the future those seeking them must ob tain regular permits in the reg ular manner prescribed for dance hall license permits. The matter arose on request of the American Legion auxiliary at Idanha for such a permit for a dance to be held some time in November. A firemen's benefit dance was granted a special per mit by the court in the Detroit area at the time of the bridge dedication. Then came a request for such a permit for another dance on October 28 which was granted. The requests, the court decided, were coming in too thick and fast and hereafter they will all be treated as applica tions tor regular permits sub ject to the same regulations. The latest one from the legion auxil iary will be referred to the sher iff for investigation, which is part of the routine followed with such regular permits. White Supremacy College Endowed Washington, Miss., Oct. 25 W) Jefferson military college has qualified for a $50,000,000 be quest by agreeing to teach white supremacy. The school's announcement last night came from A. J. Arm strong, business manager and son of George Armstrong, bene factor of the 102 year old prep institute. The college declined to pub licize its enrollment, but esti- n HELD OVER JIMMY McMULLEN Popular Ballad Singer AT Shattuc's Chateau M f Open ot 5:30 P.M. 41 WVV ENDS TONIGHT! 1 "Slattery's Hurricane' "The Great Gatsby TOMORROW! p' i -Mini Viiooist , ! intitainmint a mistoiyi mates place it at between 60 and 80 cadets. Young Armstrong said his fa ther had notified the board of trustees he would give the school all of his minerals rights in Mis sissippi upon certain conditions These conditions, which Arm strong said the school had ac cepted, include one which called for establishment of a curricula devoted chiefly to "the consti tution, Christianity and the su periority of the Anglo-Saxon and Latin-American races." Southern Pacific j Sues Geo. Flagg ! Southern Pacific company in a suit instituted in circuit court here against George H. Flagg, public utilities commissioner, seeks to set aside an order of the commissioner which would com pel the railroad company to re place an overhead crossing in Klamath county known as Tex am Overhead crossing. The complaint avers that the commissioner has no power to compel the company to construct any structure for use as a high way across its right of way without the consent of the rail road company. Further it is asserted the com missioner in including a speci fication it is to be built "to the satisfaction of the county court of Klamath county" is an unlaw ful delegation of his powers. The railroad company says that the statute limits the powers of the commissioner to "permitting" an overhead structure to be built across a railroad track and that his order is void because it is mandatory in nature. W. E. Toney Dies in Silverton Hospital Silverton, Oct. 25 W. E. Toney, one of the leading busi ness men of Silverton, died at noon Tuesday at the Silverton hospital. He was 56 years old. Toney was proprietor of Toney's Eat Shop. Among other organizations In which he held membership he was a member of the Rotary club. He became suddenly ill Satur day and was taken to the hos pital. Grand Opening China Cafe "ORDERS TO TAKE OUT" Open Daily, 4:30 p.m. to t a.m. WE SERVE CHINESE & AMERICAN DISHES Phone 2-6596 2055 Fairgrounds Road Salem, Oregon ENDS TODAY! (TUES.) I -Urhn'V1rinn PH. 3-3721 TOMORROW! Twin Re-Issued Thrills! (11(11 Oil RIIVTlim HITS THE ALL FUN ui ii i ii i r rCfemn. Soy' acuff V I I XsuJWt J " ""' A tiSH II NNXlll ALLAN LAW A Ont MARA "4iA " T H F A T B F Xarff CARTOON Motorcyclist Hits Store Window Gary Green, 1454 Hickory, was cut about the head, shoulder and right forearm Monday night when he lost control of his mo tor bicycle and crashed Into a store window on Highland ave nue. Heavy fog at the time added to the hazards which prepared the accident situation. An auto, which turned left in front of ureen, caused him to veer sharp ly, losing control of his bike. He crashed through the win dow of the Highland Market at 800 Highland avenue. His cuts were treated by a physician to whom the youth was taken by the autoist who had cut in front of him. Mat. Daily From 1 P.M. NOW SHOWING! M Hgtt MM . bUM t Km tmmtm THRILL CO-HIT! DEAN JAGGFR 7, Salem's Show Bargain! 2. HE 25c Ends Today! 6:45 p.m. Don Barry "RINGSIDE" Charles Starrett "LARAMIE" Jimmy Wakely "ACROSS RIO GRANDE" "LOST BOUNDARIES" & "ALASKA PATROL" OPENS 6:45 P.M. 81. HMD 1(111111! ICE ICT-W0f HfVJT TiT?:0 XX' n CO - FEATURE .ii 1 Xew Shoft Tonight! r r Starts at 6:45 PM. 1 Gregory Peck 1 Ava Gardner 1 "THE GREAT 1 SINNER" T ' Alexis Smith f 1 I Zachary Scott I I "ONE LAST 1 I FLING" TOMORROW! First Salem Showing! ' 1 I I I I I i r n f: irsium, , wi r m turn mm, M WKWS m '1 X- Mm iym tm niun 'mn , n ' .. 1 M M l I 11 LATE NEWS