Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, October 29, 1949, Page 3, Image 3

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French Crisis Ends Georges Bidault (left). 50-year-old
leader of the French popular republican movement, stands with
other government officials in Paris after his confirmation as
premier a move which ended France's longest political crisis
in 50 years. (Left to right, front), Bidault, President Vincent
Auriol, former Premier Henri Queuille (rear), Maurice Petsch,
Yvon Del bos, Robert Schuman, Pierre Jacquinot and Robert
LaCoste. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Paris)
PRIBILOFF ISLANDS IN
Shangri-La of Alaskan Area
Revealed in Survey Report
Washington, Oct. 29 (U.PJ The Pribilof islands of the Bering sea
are practically the "Shangri-La" of the Alaskan area, a report to
Interior Secretary J. A. Krug showed today. The islands are
north of the Aleutians.
A special survey group sponsored by the fish and wildlife serv
ice, which administers the priB
ilofs, reported the natives of the
islands are healthier, wealthier
and happier than those in any
other native community in Alas
ka, and even most mainland
communities.
Under a law passed in 1944.
the secretary of interior is au-
Salem Heights
School Notes
By JOHN HARVEY
The third grade elected class
officers Wednesdav. Sue Zwick
es'is president. Richard Lott.
vice president, Glenda Brown
ing, secretary, Charlotte Pons
ford, treasurer, and Erick Laet
sch sergeant at arms. They made
sawdust animals and beanbags
during the week.
The second and third grade
class are brineine their puppets
to school. Thev Dlanted gladiola
bulbs.
The fourth erade made saw
dust animals. Their crop on their
farm is coming ud.
Jeanette Harirson won pic
ture of the week, and Geraldine
Wellard won honorable men
tion on station KOAC's "Land of
Make-Believe." Thev are fifth
graders.
Nita Bock. Lee Gray. Kath
leen Driessler and John Friess
returned to school after being
out with the chickenpox. They
are In Mrs. Green's first grade.
Thev are making drums to use
in their music. They have a
turtle which thev are studvine
In science. Thev are painting
Halloween pictures.
About half of Mrs. Farrand's
first grade is getting over the
chickenpox. They saw a movie.
"Safety to and from School."
Salem Heights beat Liberty in
a football game 8 to 0 Friday.
Salem Heights scored a touch
down in the first quarter on a
pass from John Hammerstad to
Julian Thurston. They scored a
safety In the fourth quarter
when Liberty got trapped be
hind Its own goal.
The sixth grade elected new
social studies officers.
Duane Smith showed the fifth1
grade colored slides of some
places he went on his vacation.
He showed the Grand Tetons.
Yellowstone park. Glacier park.
'.Crater Lake. Mt. Hood, and
places around Salem. Mr. Marion
M'tler, principal, showed slides
of pictures painted by Salem
Heights students.
The fifth grade elected Ger
aldine Wellard as president.
David Bradshaw, vice president;
John Harvey, secretary: Patty
Marggl, treasurer: and Charles
. Hammerstad. reoorter.
Nationalist Plane Deserts
Hong Kong, Oct. 29 ) Cen
tral Air Transport corporation
had a twin engined C-47 trans
port serviced for a scheduled
flight to Chengtu. CATC Vice
President Moon Chin reported
the plane missing along with
three company mechanics. He
presumed the men delivered the
plan and themselves to the Chi
nese communists.
Tarsus, a town in Turkey the
harbor of which was visited by
Cleopatra's fleets, is now an in
land town 10 miles from the s
because of land washed down
from the interior.
PETE'S Barber Shop
Haircuts - 75c
Noon Til S P.M.
Saturdays I Til I
tSM Fairgrounds Road
7 V "
BERING SEA
thorized to furnish the Pribilof
natives "food, shelter, fuel,
clothing, the necessities of life,
comfort, maintenance, protec
tion and education" for the na
tives of the island.
In addition to the government
supplies, natives get monetary
compensation for seal furs de
livered to the government. Na
tive hunters get a priority on the
seals, which use St. Paul Island
in the Pribilofs as their summer
home.
"Because of the close relation
ship of these natives to the man
agement of the highly valuable
fur seal resources, they enjoy
an economy on a par with the
highest income group of anv na
tive people in all Alaska. There
are no deDressions or 'hard
times' there," the reports said.
Also, there is only one tuber
culosis patient on the island of
St. Paul, the report said, com
pared to the heavy percentage
of the disease rate among other
northern tribes . The 10-bed
hospital at St. Paul was com
pletely empty when the advis
ory group visited the island, ac
cording to the report.
"There is still resentment and
bitterness over the abrupt and
disastrous removal of the people
by the army during the early
war."
Atomic Energy Bill
Signed by President
Washington, Oct. 29 UP)
President Truman today signed
legislation aimed to put all pos
sible speed into construction
projects of the atomic energy
commission.
It exempts the AEC from gen
eral regulations barring a start
on construction of a govern
ment project until cost estimates
have been submitted to the bu
reau of the budget.
When congress voted the ex
emption, both democrats and re
publicans backed it. Chairman
McMahon (D., Conn.) of the
senate-house atomic committee
estimated it would mean a speed
up or two or three months In
AEC construction.
Bette to Be Protected
Santa Ana, Calif., Oct. 29 IIP)
Bette Davis will receive court
protection against her estranged
husband. William Grant Sherry,
until her divorce suit comes to
trial.
The actress, 41. was granted a
restraining order yesterday pro-
niDiung anerry, 34-year-old art
ist, from molesting her or taking
their 2 4 -year-old daughter from
her. Neither Miss Davis nor
Sherry appeared in court.
DANCE
SATURDAY NITE
Aumiville Pavilion j
Musle by Tommy J
Kextlah and His J
West Coast Ramblers J
In Aumsville 4
It Miles 8 E. of Salem t
t:3-12:3t S
OLD TIME DANCE
Cvery Saturday Night
Over Western Auto
t Court St
Join the crowd and have
good time
Music By
BEN'S ORCHESTRA
Pl Bl.ir DANt f
Admission (0c. Inc. Tal
Unions Won't
Move Pineapple
The Dalles. Ore., Oct. 29 W)
The Hawaiian Pineapple com
pany was forced to turn to
trucks today for shipping its
pineapple tidbits to a San Jose,
Calif., cannery.
The railroad brotherhoods,
who a week ago refused to move
boxcars across a CIO picket
line, yesterday refused to move
the cars even without the picket
line.
The company then dispatched
80 tons of pineapple by truck
But that was a small amount
compared to the 250 tons sit
ting in the five stymied boxcars.
A union notice was posted ad
vising railroad workers to spot
no more cars to the dock, where
a Hawaiian barge lies with 2.300
tons of pineapple still aboard
T. J. Carson, chairman of the
brotherhood grievance commit
tee, said the railroaders fear re
prisals, and also object to the
posting of armed deputies along
the loading dock.
The deputies were dispatched
Thursday, when the non-union
crews resumed unloading pine
apple from the barge. CIO long
shoremen, who contend the port
is unfair, were restrained by
court order from picketing.
The barge has been vainly at
tempting to disgorge its carrfo
since arriving from then strike
bound Hawaii last month. The
first unloading was halted by a
violent rush of the dock that
injured two truckers.
Keizer Newspaper
Makes Appearance
The expanding Keizer area has
taken a step in the direction of
closer organization of the com
munity and this week issued
Vol. 1 No. 1 of the Keizer News,
found, it states, October 28 by
the people of Keizer. So far the
publication has not come out for
either annexation to Salem or
incorporation as a municipality.
The six-page issue is a delight
to advertising men with the first
page and a few other scattered
column-inches devoted to activ
ities of the community.
Purpose of the publication it
is stated in a lead article by L.
Helen Olsen, is the promotion of
the general business and social
welfare of the community. It
appears under the sponsorship of
the Keizer Community club with
Dean Freycr, president; Arnold
Peterson, first vice president;
Louis Cross, second vice presi
dent; Mrs. Charles Teeter, sec
retary; Sam Orcutt, treasurer
and members of the board of
directors Onas Olson. Goldie
Youcher. Wilfred McCune, Paul
Geil and Al Lamer.
While forests are cooler than
plains, they tend to be warmer
at night because trees retard the
escape of heat.
90c CB 90c
SATURDAY t SUNDAY
' Good Home Cooking
11.00 T-BONE STEAKS tl.00
THE SNACK SHOP
17th and Center St.
IS
RUPTURE
YOUR
GETTING WORSE EACH YEAR?
Wear a DODBS TRUSS
BULBLESS BELTLESS STRAPLESS
UIKNTiriCal.Lt riTTKD NO OBLIGATIONS
dussb rauss M Htl SANITABT tu tlto
tatfeiM Dm mm Mnl Mm nflttt ll SM witk m rmmrm.. p4.
tfeM ra Mt n Im balb m Mil la ) i W
ntkn, law fcMpt Mm limn fM) mn
Mingle tv.iihl
IS. W Men. Women. Children 17.00
No mailer what tntM) you now wear, yon owe
ll lo roanelf to come eee the IMIHH.4 THINS
Capital Drug Store
Stat and Liberty
Settle Portland
Labor Disputes
Portland. Oct. 29 This
city probably will be free of la
bor disputes by Monday.
Six wholesale grocery plants,
closed by an office workers'
strike, will resume full scale
operation then. The office em
ployes voted yesterday to accept
a wage increase of 2'j cents an
hour now and 2'i cents more
next March.
! The Doernbecher Manufac
turing company announced that
it would rehire all 550 employes.
most of whom were laid off fol
lowing a brief strike. Men were
registering for work, and the
plant plans to start operations
again Monday.
Carneoie Hero
Award to 24
Pittsburgh. Oct. 29 U.R The
Carnegie hero fund commission
cited for outstanding heroism
vesterday 24 persons who risked
their lives in efforts to save oth
ers. Six of those honored by the
commission. died in their rescue
efforts. Bronze medals were
awarded to the heroes or their
survivors.
In addition, the commission,
established by the late Pitts
burgh steel pioneer. Andrew
Carnegie, granted pensions total
ing $3,120: made la awards fori
educational or other purposes!
totaling $6,750 and gave onei
$300 disability payment.
Included among the outstand
ing cases were two Boeing field.
Seattle, mechanics, who rescued
six Yale students from the burn
ing wreckage of a plane.
John Kostelnik, R e n t o n,
Wash., and John R. Kolthof,
Seattle, risked their lives in res
cue work when an airplane car
rying 27 Yale students crashed
during a takeoff from an ice
coated runway and burst into
flames.
Despite the intense heat. Kos
telnik and Kolthof went into the
burning cabin. Kostelnik drag
ged four students to safety and
Kolthom two. Both suffered
injuries. Fourteen persons died
in the flaming plane.
Traffic Deaths
Show Decrease
Auto traffic in Oregon cost a
toll of five to six lives for each
100,000,000 miles of travel in
September, the traffic safety
division of the secretary of
state's office reported today.
Traffic deaths for the month
totaled 29. Aggregate travel for
all vehicles was estimated at
515,000,000 miles. The death
rate, or number of fatalities in
each 100.000.000 miles, was com
puted at 5.6 to mark a drop from
the 8 recorded in August.
The division said highway
travel fell off sharply in Septem-1
ber, but that the month saw an ;
even more marked decline in
deaths.
The average monthly rate for ,
the first nine months of the year
is 5.2. compared with 7.6 for!
the first nine months of last I
year. The division said that if1
this average can be maintained
through the critical fall and win-1
ter months, Oregon will record
the lowest annual traffic death j
rate in its history. I
Cedar Rapids, la., Oct. 29 U.R)
School children were delight
ed to learn today that A. J.
Bailey, 83, was fined $5 for
running a stop sign.
Bailey has been truant officer
for 50 years.
HALLOWEEN
MASQUERADE
DANCE
TONIGHT
Glenwood
Ballroom
Larry and His
Cascade Range Riders
fun
if PRIZES
"On the Corner"
riTf r r",!"ri'i,'ij',','ni
rJit ill-
I l Li Jf IE'
r4rrl
si. -
w, Sat
Arrive in Germany Isaac Patch, American diplomat ex
pelled from Czechoslovakia under espionage charges, is shown
with his family on arrival in Frankfurt, Germany. Left to
right are Mrs. Patch, carrying daughter Helen, Penelope,
Eliza and Mr. Patch. (Acme Telephoto.)
600 Killed in
Colombia War
Bogota, Colombia, Oct. 29 U.R)
Political fighting in Colombia
is raging unabated in the coun
tryside, with 175 persons killed
in one 24-hour period in Valle
province alone, reports reaching
Bogata said today.
These reports said 150 liberal
followers, including women and
children, were killed at Ceilan
when conservative opponents
from the surrounding Bugala
grande area set fire to the town.
Another 25 were killed in
similar fighting at Villanuevn,
also in Valle province, the re
ports said.
Several other persons were
known to have been killed in
fighting which is still going on
between the liberal town of
Dona and conservative residents
of nearby Charba, liberals re
ported. Confirmation on the latest re
ports of casualties would bring
the number of those killed in
recent weeks to more than 600.
Mrs. Oscar Smith, formerly of
Eugene, Ore., an American mis
sionary at the Evangelical Mis
sion in Zetaquira, reported an at
tack on the church and school,
but added that neither she nor;
her husband had been harmed.
The tundra, a vast swampy
plain bordering the Arctic oc
ean, has been called Arctic des
ert.
Old Time Dance
Masquerade
Saturday Night
Music by
Harvey Shubbles Orchestra
Macleay Grange Hall
Sponsored by Macleay
Young Grangers
9:00 to 12:30
Prizes
We have "00
gifts; would you
'1
KM
mm
Its
s4
it
Linn County Starts
Rural Overseas Plan
Albany Organization of the
Christian Rural Overseas pro
gram in Linn county took place
at a meeting at the Methodist
church Friday. Hector Macpher
son, Jr., of Oakville, is county
chairman.
Mrs. Jack Draper. Albany, Is
secretary; Floyd Edwards, Al
bany, treasurer; Bob Cale, Oak
ville, commodity chairman and
Floyd Mullen, Albany, publicity
chairman.
Last year. Mullen said. Linn
county raised funds which were
used to purcliase canned milk. :
CAPITOLA
Roller Rink
Halloween Party
TONIGHT
Skating
Every Sat. and Sun P. M.
2 P. M. to 4:30 P. M.
Always
Ed Syringe at the Organ
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
IS ADULT NIGHT
Now Under
New Management
LEGIONNAIRES
Special Sunday Dollar Dinner
Tomato or Fruit Juice Cocktail Soup Salad
Pacific International Prize Ground Beef With
Fresh Mushroom Sauce
Choice of Dessert Rolls and Butter Coffee or Tea
Open i-M
All Legionnaires, Auxiliary
Phone 3-7623
Creator of Hair Styles
Is Ready to Serve You and Invites You to
ODLPEN D0(D)tlDE
Tiiecliy, Nov.
10 AM. !..
You nro invited in inspect Hie most modern and up - to
fashion salon in this vieinity.
Hrintr your beauty problems to Kricli of New York aud his per
sonally trained and experieiieed operators for eomplete analysis.
A special representative of Wevlon will be present to advise you
in beauty rare for your hands, nails, and makeup.
personal
like oneT
Capital Journal, Snlem, Ore.,
Jesuits Dismiss
Father Feeney
Cambridge. Mass.. Oct. 29 UPi
The Rev. Leonard J. Feeney,
S. J., noted Roman Catholic au
thor, lecturer and poet, was dis
missed last night from the Jes
uit order in the latest move
against him in a six-month-old
dispute.
Fr. Feeney announced the dis
missal himsolt. He said it was
for alleged "disobedience."
He was deprived of his priest
ly functions on January 1 by
Archbishop Richard J. Cush
ing. head of the Boston diocese,
for approval of teachings of three
Boston college lay professors
that there is no salvation outside
of the Catholic church.
The alleged "disobedience" in
volved Fr. Feeney's refusal in
September, 1948, to accept trans
fer to Holy Cross college in Wor
cester, a Jesuit institution.
Fr. Feeney said he would con
tinue "as a Catholic priest, loyal
and devoted to the church and
to the pope."
He told newspapermen that he Ho
had received a registered letter ll
from the Rev. John J. McEleney, j s
S. J.( New England provincial!:
of the Society of Jesus, enclosing j!
a dismissal decree from the Rev. I
Jean Baptise Janssens, general
or the order at Rome. '
The original dispute arose over i
the contention of Fr. Feeney's!
group that there is no salvation I
outside of the Catholic church.
The supreme sacred congrega-1
tion of the holy office in Rome
declared late in July that this
view was "far from being gen
uine Catholic teaching."
l DANCE i
9
To the Music of
Lee and the
Melody Ramblers
ALBANY ARMORY
Every
Saturday Night
Admission 65c. Inc. tax
Semi-Modern
liilliMI
P
SPECIAL HALLOWEEN
DANCE
T0NITE
to
Wayne Strachan's
Music
VFW HALL
Hood ond Church Sts.
to 9:30 I'.M.
Members and Their Guests
2650 So. Commercial St.
(Crici of flew IJork
251 North Liberty
(FORMERLY OGDEN'S)
Saturday, October 19, 1949 S
Quiet Halloween
For City in Kansas
Pittsburgh, Kan., Oct. It (U.B
It s going to b i quiet Hal
loween Monday night in Pitts
burgh whether youngsters like
it or not, City Manager William
S. Hansen said today.
He Invoked an old city ordi
nance requiring everyone under
16 years of age to be off the
streets by dark.
13-Year-0ld Shoots
1000-Pound Moose
Lillooet, B. C. Oct. 29 (CP)
Good marksmen come in ill
sizes.
A 13-year-old California boy
will return to his Glendale home
with the head of a one-thousand
-pound moose, which he bagged
in the Lillooet area of British
Columbia.
The boy, Ernest Provo Jr.,
nailed the huge animal with one
shot from his custom-built 7
mm. rifle.
A Fixture for
Every Taste!
A Compliment
to Every Home
w
WESTERN
a Excellent for den lighting
. . . with a true Western
flavor!
TROPICAL
For your living room' . . .
" dining room ... In beauti
ful soft exciting tropical
colors'
GARDEN
Just down-right beautiful!
For any living room large
or small!
BAMBOO
A perfect compliment for
Dad's den ... or If yon pre-
9 ter ... to brighten up the
Jiving room!
Reasonable?
Yes!
Ask About Them Today
Salem Lighting
& Appliance Co.
236 N. High
Dial 3-9412
- date hair