Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 03, 1949, Page 2, Image 2

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t Capital Journal, Salem,
CIO Turns to
Political Purges
Cleveland, Nov. 3 VP) The
CIO turned to iti mounting
domestic and world-wide poli
tical chores today wrapped in
the newly acquired robes of a
right-wing federation.
The roll of the political action
committee (PAC) in the 1B50
elections was due for plenty of
attention before convention ad
journment because of the CIO's
expressed chagrin at the failure
of congress this session to repeal
the Taft-Hartley act.
President Truman pledged re
peal, but both house and senate
rebelled.
In international politics, the
CIO is joining with the AFL and
labor federations abroad in cre
ating a new World Labor Con
gress, rivalling the Soviet-dom
inated World Federation of
Trade Unions.
The CIO withdrew from the
WFTU last spring because it
complained it was unable to
check the flood of communist
propaganda in the organization
Hot debate was expected over
foreign affairs and the interna
tional move from at least some
of the left-wing leaders still sit
ting in the convention hall. Har
ry Bridges, west coast longshore
leader, is one who wants to con
tinue in the WFTU because, he
says, it helps in dock strikes to
have cooperation of foreign
crews and longshoremen.
The major leftist -led un
ions The United Electrical
Workers and Farm Equipment
Workers were bounced out by
convention action yesterday.
That left 10 others to face the
equally severe inspection of the
51 -man executive board.
The board is scheduled to
meet Saturday, but may asscm
ble sooner to act on a convention
order to carry out the anti-leftist
purge to completion.
Stale Police
Get Advances
Slate Police Supt. H. G. Mal-
son announced today the follow
ing state police promotions:
Sgt. Lyle H. Harrcll, to lieu
tenant, and transferred from
Hoseburg to the Baker district
headquarters.
Sgt. Holly Holcomb, transfer
red from St. Helens to Rose
burg. Sgt. Louis G. Johnson, trans
ferred from LaGrande to Sa
lem, where he will become as
sistant to the director of the bu
reau of identification and crim
inal Investigation.
Pvt. Dominic J. Casciato, to
sergeant, and transferred from
The Dalles to LaGrande.
Pvt. Stuart T. Earl, to ser
geant, and transferred from Pen
dleton to Baker district head
quarters. Lafayette Names
Extension Workers
Lafayette T h e home exten
sion unit met at the home of
Mrs. Alice Bosshardt with the
business meeting In the morn
ing and pot luck lunch at noon.
Miss Alina Hartman of Mc
Minnville. Yamhill county agent,
gave a demonstration on color
and design for rugs. Next meet
ing will be at the home of Mrs.
Roy Sparks, November 18. Dem
onstrations will be on sea foods
cookery.
Committees were appointed:
Luncheon, Mrs. Roy Sparks,
Mrs. Alton and Mrs. Fennrll,
4 11, Mrs. Sophie Hills; recrea
tion, Mrs. Alice Bosshardt; hos
pitality, Francis Beard, Neita
Tprrv: nntilii'ifv Mr Arllmr
Laman; standard unit. Mrs.
ta Terry; ACWW, Miss Margaret
Ferguson: project leaders, Mrs.
Sophie Hills and Mrs. Neita Ter
ry. Silverton Parish
Opens Card Series
Silverton The first in a ser
ies of Sunday evening card par
tics is being given by the congre
gation of St. Paul's Catholic par
ish Sunday, at the hall with
"500" and three-handed pino
chle In play.
Alfred Schiedler is chairman
of plans assisted by Mrs. Schied
ler, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Mey
ers, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hynrs, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Schneider, Mr
and Mrs. Robert Wcllman, Mr
and Mrs. Orval Volker. Mr. and
Mrs. Cletus May and Ed Meyers.
BIG DANCE
FRIDAY NIGHT
at the New
"NO NAME BALLROOM"
(Former Location of Club Combo)
OPEN TO ALL AGES
Modern Music br
Claude Bird and His Orchestra
Admission 75c, To Included
Ore., Thursday, Nov. 3, 1949
Jaycee Speech
Contest Planned
Final plans for the Junior
Chamber of Commerce spon
sored "I Speak for Democracy'
contest which will reach its cli
max in Salem on November 14
were announced Thursday by
Stan Schofield, who heads the
Jaycee contest committee.
The two finalists from each
of Salem's three high school:
Salem academy, Sacred Heart
and Salem senior hiih will
meet on that date in final com
petition.
All six speeches on democra
cy will be broadcast over radio
station KSLM, with the judges
to make their selection of the
three top finalists at that time
It will be a 45 minute afternoon
program.
Judges for the competition
will be Prof. Ruane Hill of Wil
lamette university. Jay Gordon
Thornton and Dave Hoss of
KSLM.
a transcript of the winning
speech will be mailed to the
state Jaycee committee chair
man, John Luvaas, at Eugene
for judging on the state level.
State winners will be entered
in national competition with a
$500 scholarship at stake for
several of the finalists.
As rewards for the local ef
fort, a special meeting of the
Salem Junior Chamber will be
held on November 23 to honor
the top contestants of each Sa
lem high school with a radio
slated to be presented to each
of them by Heider's Radio shop.
GOP Treasurer
(hits; Funds Low
Chicago, Nov. 3 UP) James
S. Kemper resigned today as
treasurer of the republican na
tional committee because the
GOP's reserve funds have fallen
below $125,000.
Kemper, a Dewey delegate at
the 1948 GOP convention, also
said he has been handicapped by
a difference between his opin
ions and those of "the party
officially or unofficially ' on
political issues.
Kemper, a Chicago insurance
executive, offered to quit last
August. He stayed on when his
proposal was turned down by
the committee. But he served no
tice then that he would quit au
tomatically if he GOP cash box
fell below the $125,000 mark.
Today he said he has signed a
$35,000 check, requested by Guy
G. Gabrielson, national GOP
chairman for operating expens
es: Kemper said that leaves the
GOP with only $90,000.
The republicans had $832,000
at the start of 1048. he said, but
this dwindled to $227,000 by
August, 1949.
One Day Drive
Starts Friday
Woodburn The "kick off"
breakfast to start the Woodburn
Community Chest "dawn to
dusk" campaign will be held
Friday morning, at the Filbert
Grove restaurant at 7:30 o'clock
for all captains and workers.
The area captains will pay
for the breakfasts of their work
ers and no money is used from
the campaign fund for this pur
pose.
Rev. Arthur Goblc. commun
ity chairman, will give the pep
talk and materials will be distri
buted to the workers.
The area includes the Wood-
burn consolidated school district
plus the McKce and Union dis
tricts. Area captains, who will ap
point their own workers, are
Lynn Woods, Elmer Mattson.
William E. Dunn, Jr., P. C. Mc-
Nci-r"UK" "' '-vn,an -
-
Lnrlcs . v- Kay
Fenton, Homer Wadsworth
Winton Hunt, J. Melvin Rinco
Frank Purlingham and Frank
P. Doerfler.
Hunters Bag Elk
Early First Day
Lebanon Three local broth
ers, Archie. Lee and Ralph Pru
itt, successfully opened the elk
season near Ukiah by bagging
their animals before 9:30 o'clock
on the morning of the opening
day.
Largest kill, a two-year-old
heifer weighing 400 pounds
dressed, was taken by Lee. The
other two elk weighed 140 and
150 pounds. The three men re
port a large kill In that area on
the season's opening day.
Oil from ships kills many sea
birds by saturating their feath
rrs so they cannot fly,
No So Confident Sigmund Engel (left), elderly confi
dence man, is not his usual dapper and talkative self as he
faces jail bars again. The 74-year-old self-styled lover of
1,001 women, was convicted in Chicago on charges of bilking
a Chicago widow of $8,700 after promising to marry her.
He faces a one to 10 year prison sentence. At right are two
sheriff's deputies. (AP Wirephoto)
Boxcar Crisis
Eased a Little
Some improvement in the
box car situation in Salem was
reported Thursday both by
shippers and by the Southern
Pacific company.
The Salem freight office of
the SP got word, Freight Agent
W. E. Burks said, that it can fill
its own orders and not have to
go through the Portland office.
"There has been a real break
in the last day or two," Burks
said. "I hope it will continue.
because we have a lot of busi
ness staring us in the face."
The West Salem Lumber com
pany reports the situation better
as compared with last week. The
Arrow Mill & Lumber compa
ny says it is better, but still the
company is getting only a little
over half the cars it needs.
The Friesen Lumber & Supply
company isn't gutting all the cars
it wants, but has noted an easing
up of the shortage this week,
amounting at one time to a spurt
in the car suptw.
Capitol Lunir company re
ports the railroad company "do
ing pretty well by us," and the
B. J. Minden Lumber company
is "getting by," the office report
ed. Watches Are Needed
By Young Hunters
Albany Four young hunters
may as well lay their guns
away for the rest of this season
because they didn't keep track
of the time.
Two of the youths, Keith
Smith and Alfred Fagan, live at
Brownsville and the other two,
Lyle lverson and Dean Edwards,
live at Corvallis. Two were
picked up by state police on the
Linn county side of the Willam
ette river near Corvallis.
All four pleaded guilty in jus
tice court here to charges of
hunting after hours and Judge
Harlow Weinrick suspended
their hunting licenses for the re
mainder of the season.
Shedd Area First
n Campaign Quota
Albany Shedd became the
first Linn county community to
break over the top of its Com
munity Chest quota, when it
turned In S692 to Lars Freder
ieksen, county chest chairman.
The Shedd quota was $885.
Meanwhile in Albany Chest
collection approached the $5000
mark of the $12,000 quota, it
was announced by Howard Hick
am, local chairman.
Ojv the Best
is labelled
BELLOWS
r'SJ!rT5-T P -fo i
Etta
BELLOW.
Partners Choice
The rentury-old name on orrr 200 wine ami npirit offerings,
is your assurance of fine quality at a fair price.
BELLOWS ft COMPANY VnrVwk CnlornAo 5pr, Ckiatn
Itnmi artwt Clitic, Whisksj-A llw II I Tnt tO Arm Ntvtrsl $pmu
Cordon Slams
81st Congress
Portland, Nov. 3 (IP) Sen
Guy Cordon (D., Ore.), said here
today the session of congress
just completed wasn't half as
good as the one before.
He said there was no com
parison between the 80lh con
gross and the 81st.
"In the 80th congress for the
first time in almost two decades
we kept the country in the
black," he said. ' At the same
time we took over 7,000,000
lower income people off the fed
eral tax roils, and that means
more take home pay in the en
velopes." Cordon, arriving here by train
this morning from Washington,
D. C, will address a state con
vention of Oregon Republican
clubs at Salem tomorrow night.
The senator was emphatic in
his opposition to a reduction of
tariffs by the United States. He
said trade barriers between Eu
ropean countries had been in
creased since the war.
"Let's let the European coun
tries remove their tariffs so that
there can be real inter-European
trade before we make further
changes in ours."
Sublimity Observes
Educational Week
Sublimity The Sublimity
school will observe American
Education Week, Nov. 6 to 12
with dedication of its new school
building and with open house
the afternoon and evening of
Nov. 8.
The new elementary building.
designed by Freeman and Hyslip.
is to be dedicated Tuesday eve
ning. It is expected that officials
from county and state offices of
education as well as representa
tives of the architectural and
contracting firms will be present.
ah rooms will carry on their
regular work during the day.
Parents and friends are being
urged to visit during school
hours so that they may see
pupils at work.
JrattciJ
Ccnger
Is
Coming Back
M
Drainage Plans
Deadlocked
The co-operative arrangement
for the county to aid the city in
its drainage program north of
Salem at the Silverton road came
to a temporary deadlock at least
Thursday when the city asked
that the county clean out a ditch
running north from the road at
Hollywood avenue for a dis
tance of about 2100 feet, instead
of the 300 feet first asked and
agreed to.
After City Manager Franzen
and Engineer Harold Davis with
County Judge Grant Murphy.
Commissioner Ed Rogers and
County Engineer Hedda Swart
had examined the proposed work
the county judge told the city of
ficials the county wouldn't un
dertake the job until it had some
definite cost estimates from the
city which could be approved by
the county court.
The necessity for extending
the ditch deepening from 300
feet to 2100 feet from jvhere a
proposed new bridge will be put
in on the Silverton road arose be
cause levels taken showed the
fall in the ditch is very slight
and the 300 feet first planned
would do little good in carrying
off the expected high waters of
the winter.
On inspection of the ditch
the county officials found that
part of it is overgrown with
shrubbery and in fact huge trees
are growing out of it.
The cost of clearing the stuff
and getting it away apparently
would be more than the cost of
deepening," said Judge Murphy.
"We would like to know some
thing more about just how ex
pensive this will be and espec
ially how the clearing will be
handled before he make any
commitments."
Houston Bus
Drivers Sfriki
Houston, Tex., Nov. 3 (IP)
Industrial Houston was without
bus service today as striking
drivers and mechanics postpon
ed a vote on a company wage
dispute settlement offer.
The 1100 CIO Transport union
members went on strike at 12:01
a.m. and received the new com
pany proposal shortly after 4
a.m. (CST).
A secret ballot on acceptance
or rejection was postponed until
9 a.m. A stormy mass meeting,
delayed two hours as negotia
tions continued after the strike
began, was recessed at 6 a.m. af
ter two hours of debate.
The buses are the only public
Vr JOHN
PAYNE
SF.COND FEATlnvt
"AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL"
Gloria Jean, Jimmy Lydon
GLENN
FORD
Janet Leigh
Gloria De Haven
in
"The Doctor and
the Girl"
and
Thrilling! True!
"ARCTIC Fl'RY"
GARY
COOPER
in Warner Bros.'
"Task Force"
with Wayne Morris
Walter Brennan
Jane Wyatt
and
Cornell Wilde
In
"SHOCKPROOF"
!
IIDUVDIODD
NOW SHOWING - Open 6:45
w U mrL m4
IP
w
I LAST TI.ME8 TOMTE! I
pi STARTS AT 6:5 P.M. ll
I I I.orrtta Young I I A
I I Celeste Holm I (
II "Come to the II
U Marie Wilson If i
III Walter Able Iff
111 "Fabulous Joe'' Iff
transportation for hundreds of
thousands of Houstonians. There
are no street cars in the city.
The new proposal calls for a
13-cent hourly wage increase
over the current $1.17 average.
The company previously had of
fered 10-cents. The union has
demanded 30-cents.
A union spokesman said the
proposal was contingent upon
the union's immediate acceptance.
To Talk Love
Life of Oyster
"The Love Life of an Oyster"
will be the subject of a talk at
the Chamber of Commerce Mon
day noon. The speaker, an au
thority on the romantic impulses
of oysters, will be E. N. Steele,
president of the Rock Point
Oys.ter company of Olympia.
And that isn't all. Olympia
oyster cocktails and Olympias
stewed will be served at the
luncheon.
Advance tips about Mr.
Steele's talk say "It's funny . . .
it's educational." It is the story
of the growth of the Pacific oy
ster industry by an oyster pio
neer. Steele graduated in law from
the University of Iowa in 1903
and set up a practice in Olympia.
He still is a lawyer. But in 1907
he got interested in oysters as a
hobby. Now, he says, It's his
main business.
Chamber members will vote
on new directors of the organi
zation Monday and the ballots
will be counted immediately af
ter the luncheon.
New members to be introduc
ed are: Al Isaak. realtors, 3035
Portland road; Richard O. Cris
well, representative of Reming
ton Rand, 357 North High; L. H.
Wright, owner of Wright Truck
Line, Stayton.
Weniger Heads Baptists
Portland. Ore.. Nov. 3 (JP
The Rev. Archer Weniger, Oak
land, Calif., today was reelected
western regional head of the
Conservative Baptist Association
of America.
Mat. Daily From 1 P.M.
NOW! ROARING
ADVENTURE!
THRILL CO-HIT
Sonia Dresde) Bartara Whrtt
Opens 6:45 P.M.
NOW! THRILLS
Fred
MocMurray
Sylvia
Sidney
Henry Fonda
"TRAIL OF THE
LONESOME PINE"
In Technicolor
CO-THRILLER!
Preston Foster
"GERONIMO"
Salem's Show Bargain
2 FIRST RUN O C
HITS! 33C
NOW! OPENS 6:45 P.M.
Thrills in the Antarctic!
ADMIRAL BIRD'S
"Discovery"
' Eddie Dean
"Check Your Gum"
MEN'S' SUITS
VIRGIN WOOL IN THE FINEST
SELECTION OF SIZES, COLORS AND PATTERNS. .
AT THESE PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD
TO HAVE A SPARE FOR CHILLY WEATHER AHEAD
TH05.
Oregon Projects
Get $3 Million
Portland, Nov. 3 (IP) Three
Oregon reclamation projects will
get more than three million dol
lars in the current fiscal year,
the Oregon Journal's Washing
ton bureau reported today.
It said the program, to be re
leased in detail tomorrow by re
clamation Commissioner Michael
W. Straus at the Salt Lake City
meeting of the National Recla
mation association, is this:
Deschutes project: Work on
Wickiup reservoir and irrigation
distribution facilities, $383,440;
rehabilitation work on the Arn
old irrigation district, $47,196;
rehabilitation of Ochoco dam,
$896,724; and rebuilding a pipe
line to the Grants Pass irriga
tion district, $83,800.
Klamath project of Oregon
and California: Construction of
pumping plants, laterals and
drains and for completion of the
final report on boundary dam
and the settler assistance pro
gram, $1,559,932.
Owyhee project of Oregon
and Idaho: Completion of the
main canal and lateral system,
irrigating 103.499 acres in 1686
farms, $51,275.
Combination School
And Purge for Czechs
Prague Nov. 3 UP) The big
gest school in Czechoslovakia's
history opened today.
It is a combination school and
purge.
Students are the 2.500.000
members and "candidate" mem
bers of the Czechoslovak com
munist party, from officers
HAMILTON from $49.50
ELGIN from $29.75
BULOVA from $24.75
GRUEN from $29.75
ond other standard makes
from $17.85
A Liberal Allowance For Your
OLD WATCH
REGARDLESS OF AGE!!
FEDERAL TAX INCLUDED
Lay-Away LiM I 1 I
Now K Ifi M 1 ia u ITiVJ
for I jmPad4
Christmas! XffffrffiSfiS I
TOPCOATS
KAY WOOLEN MILLS
260 South 12th St.
down. Their studies are Marx
Leninism, In evening courses to
be held at least twice monthly
for a year in thousands of dis
trict study groups.
All current membership cards
are to be called ' in and new
cards issued only to those who
attend the courses.
Loot From Foster
Found in Trailer
Albany Loot has been recov
ered from a trailer house locat
ed near Corvallis and belonging
to Byron C. Gift and Robert
Near Martin of Foster. Mechanic
and plumber tools, a blow torch,
drill press and automobile ac
cessories were found stowed in
the trailer house.
State police reported that they
had found in the trailer house
articles valued at several hun
dreds of dollars, all of it believ
ed to have been stolen by the
Foster pair within the last two
or three weeks from garages,
cars and houses in various parts
of Linn, Marion and Benton
counties, though ownership to
most of the plunder has not yet
been established.
Search of the trailer house
followed arrest of Gift and Mar
tin by state police when they
were caught in the act of si
phoning gasoline from a car
parked .near Cottonwoods. For
this they were consigned to the
county jail for 30 days each.
Overland Gets Fish
Silverton Edwin Overland,
active in the Izaak Walton
league,- landed a 20-pound sal
mon during a two-day vacation
with his fishing pal, Lawrence
Larson, at Woods, near the coast.
Larson was not so fortunate. His
fish all got away.
Credit
Cotti You
Nothing
Extra!
$35 $50
v
520 $40
1 ,
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