9; y - filial Journal, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, Nov. 10, 1949 Grain Crops Estimated Yields Larger Than Needed " Washington, Nov. 10 OP) The agriculture department, in its a next to last report of the year, today estimated this year's corn crop at 3,357,618,000 bushels. J This is 119,368,000 bushels less than the 3,476.986,000 fore t cast a month ago. i Justice Douglas 1 Forgives Horse r Yakima, Nov. 10 UP) Ken J dall, favorite horse of U.S. Su it preme Court Justice William O Douglas, has been forgiven. J "It wasn't his fault," Douglas commented, referring to the mountain mishap when the horse r reared and fell backwards upon him. r The accident happened a I month ago and sent the 51-year old jurist to the hospital with 17 e broken ribs. 1 Yesterday's outing to the near 1 by ranch of Elon J. Cilbert, his ; companion on the trip, was one of the first for Douglas since ' entering the hospital. He is ex i peeled to be released within t few days, but plans to rest in i the south before returning to i Washington, D.C. ; 16 Year Youth I Sent fo Prison w Klamath Falls, Nov. 10 UP) A prison term was ordered to i day for William David Roach 16, the youngest person sent to I the state penitentiary from Kla- math county in recent history of , the local circuit court. i The boy participated in an armed robbery at Malin Septem- . bcr 22 and last Sunday attemp ted to break out of the county Jail. ' , In passing sentence, Judge Da- vid R. Vandcnberg remarked J that Roach was the only person - under 18 he had sent to prison ; in his nine years' on the bench, . and told the youth: : "You are not fit to be at , large." The sentence was not to ex ,T ceed three years the minimum t for armed robbery. Z A companion in the Malin f robbery, Wesley Le Roy Davis. also 16, is held in jail here and - probably will be taken into J juvenile court. The boys, armed with a re- volver and a knife, held up How r ard Henderson, Great Northern station agent at Malin and took - $56.42 and the agent's car. They J; were apprehended north of Al- turas, Calif., less than two hours after the robbery. . Last Sunday at the county jail 7 Roach got his main floor cell open on a pretext, and tried to crowd past Deputy Dale Mat Z toon, calling to Davis and two other boys In the cell: J "Come on, we're getting out i of here." Rut Mattoon said he shoved the t youth back In the cell before he J passed the door. : Missions in China Protest Aid to Chiang t New York, Nov. 10 (A) A J Christian Missions executive said today 330 Christian leaders In China have protested further t United States aid to the nation- I alist Kuomintang because of re cent bombings. The protest arrived by cable - Tuesday, according to Dr. Frank J Cartwright, chairman of the n China committee of the Fuieign J Missions Conference of North America, an lnterdenomination al group. Cartwright said the cable pro- tested Kuomintang bombings "killed numerous Innocent Chi- nese civilians" and asked U.S. p churches to urge the govern r mont to stop further aid. Z The cable was signed by Geo. n Wu, chairman of a meeting of In 3 slitutional representatives at " Shanghai. Pnrtl.'knH Nnu ill iB Annth. V v cr longshoreman surrendered to J police yesterday on a grand Jury r indictment charging him with 7 participating in the September i 28 pineapple riot at The Dalles. t He was Frederick Setlje, Port i land, the 23rd CIO lnngshore r man cited In the riot. He posted I $2,500 bond. What do YOU want in a drink? Mod folks want batter loir. That's why they twitch to lighter, milder, smoother CALVERT I CALTOT imm nmad WMtktJ ' -M l Proof -5 Or&ln Neutral Bplnu. Ctlnrt Distillers Oorp., New York CHj It compares with last year's record crop of 3.650.548,000 bushels and with the ten-year (1938-47) average of 2,787,628, 000 bushels. The Indicated crop Is consid crauly larger than prospective needs. This fact will require the department to impose acreage allotments on the 1950 crop to cut production and to prevent a burdensome surplus. The national planting allot ment is expected to be around 76.000,000 acres, or about 10.- 000.000 less than was planted for this year s crop. The wheat figure remained unchanged at 1,126,226.000 bushels compared with 1,288,- 406,000 last year and 991.950,- 000 for the ten-year average. The November 1 estimates compared with those of a month ago, last year and the ten-year average, respectively, for crops on which new figures were giv en Included: Potato 386,832 000 bushrla 445.860,000 ind 393.403.000. 37S.S05.000; ApplM commrclih 133.388.000 buxhela; 133.136.000 : 88.407.009 and 111.114 000. Ptnr 36.001,000 biMhcli: 3S.S36.0O0: 31.. 334.000 and 30.932.000. Production of mtlk in October wm re ported at 9,004.000,000 pounds, compared with 9.390.000.000 In September 8.748 000. 000 In October laat year and 8.656,000,000 lor trie ten-year October averaie. Production of en in October waj re ported at 3.749,000,000 compared with 3.S78.OOO.000 In Seotember. 3 497 nnn nnn in October laat year and 3.784.000,000 for the ten-year October averaie. Th Indicated yield per acre and pro duction of Important cropa by maior-ora. ducinv at&trx Included: Apples (commercial) fproduction on1r: Washington 31.820.000 buxheU: Ore ion 3,010.000; California 9.520.000. erar 'Production only): Wn.hlnttOn 7.300.000 btixheU: nrnnn 8, 150,000; California 15.667,000. Marie Dorion Marker Urged A highway marker at the in tersection of the Gervais road and highway DOE in memory of Mane Dorion, Indian wife of an interpreter with the Astor party of 1810, is recommended by Old Oregon Trail, Inc., Alfred A. Loab, president. Accepted burial place of "the Dorion woman" is under the church at St. Louis. Suggestions of the association for markers commemorating his torical places, persons and events, have been turned over to the state highway commission. Another suggestion is a mar ker at the Barlow home at Bar low, built by Samuel K. Barlow, who constructed the first wagon road south of Mt. Hood in 1846. which was In use as a toll road for 70 years. Erection of markers will make Oregon highways more inter esting and create community pride, Loab believes. He thinks that a few thousand dollars so spent will cause motorists to pause and read and thus spend more time and dollars in Oregon. tkv 'ffJ.b ,: Spoils of Columbian Klots Wrecked church stands in ruins in Arauca, Columbia, as political riots flare through the country, leaving a wake of ruined buildings and heavy casualties. The newspaper El Liberal reported that rioting at one point had reached the proportions of a "pitched battle." The pre-election riots have claimed some 300 lives. (Acme Telephoto) COMPANY "B" BENEFIT DANCE Friday, Nov. 11, 1949 Time 9:00 p.m. to 12 p.m. SALEM ARMORY GLENN WOODRY'S ORCHESTRA Public Invited Aim. Gontltm.n 1 .00 ladioi 50c ARMISTICE DAY DANCE AUMSVILLE PAVILION TOMMY KEZZIAH And WEST COAST RAMBLERS (Western Music) T f r( d SlSS. u jb View of the 'Kremlin' Featured at the Russian embassy in Washington, D. C, celebration of the 32nd anniversary of the Red revolution, was centerpiece replica of a Moscow Kremlin building, mounted on a lare cake. At left, the wife of Russian Ambassador Alexander Pantushkin serves a slice of the foundation cake to Joseph Davis, former U. S. Ambassa dor to Russia. (AP Wirephoto) Criminals' Way Grows Harder Because the process of crime detection has become a science in recent years, many criminals now plead guilty rather than face the evidence during a Jury trial. So said Joe Murray, chief clerk of the state prison, during a talk before the Salem Lions Thursday noon. Murray listed the various me thods by which experts trace criminals, pointing out that fin gcrprints have constituted the most satisfactory evidence that man has devised. Photographs, because of their differences, play a lesser part' in modern day crime detection. He character ized the forger as the most "foolish" of criminals because handwriting experts can deter mine his identity within a short space of time. The ultra violet light in de tecting the various shades of ink was described by Murray, who said that each nation had a dif ferent characteristic in the matter of handwriting. Killed in Collision Pendleton Nov. 10 tP) Jack Day Lewis and Mrs. Alice Fer rell, both of Pendleton, and Lowell Arthur Vabman, Beaver ton, Ore., were killed early to day on U.S. highway 30 about 16 miles west of Pendleton when their car collided with the rear of a disabled Consolidated truck parked on the edge of the highway, State Police Sgt. N. W. Smith reported. Hit Wherry Assails Truman Policies Son Francisco, Nov. 10 VP) President Truman's domestic and foreign policies were assailed bitterly before the National Re tail Lumber Dealers' association here today by Senator Wherry (R., Neb.). "President Truman's tech nique leads down the road to communism because it attempts to buy freedom with material things," Wherry said iri a pre pared address. The senate minority leader in the 81st congress criticized the reciprocal trade agreements act, tariff cutting, foreign aid and administration spending. Wherry likened the "promis- ers of today" to the "medicine men of the gold rush days of 49 in California. The '49ers, he said, called the promises of their day a "gold brick," but to day "it is the welfare state." "All the gold dug by the 49ers," he continued, "would not pay the first installment on the welfare slate. 1 And the di rection America is being led, points to bankruptcy more dev astating than the atomic bomb." Wherry said the principles on which the country was establish ed "are being blacked out." He added: "Socialism and its front- runner, communism, are spread ing their evil doctrine over oth er parts of the world; and the backwash is infiltrating right into the heart of our govern ment." On foreign aid, Wherry said: "America has poured $35,- 000, in cash and goods into Eu rope, under 23 money spending schemes, and those countries are still crying for more." OK Aviation Gas Export to Yugoslavia Washington, Nov. 10 tP) The government today approved ex port of 40,000 barrels of avia tion gasoline to Yugoslavia. It was the latest in a number of U.S. actions to bolster Mar shal Tito of Yugoslavia in his scrap with Russia's leaders. The action was announced by the commerce department, which issued licenses permitting the gasoline shipment. Yellowstone National Park. Wyo., Nov. 10 11 A snowstorm early today closed all roads in Yellowstone national park. About eight inches of snow foil in the Wyoming, Montana-Idaho playground over night. IIQUVLUOOQ Now Showing Open 6:45 C-FMlare -TALL IN THr SADDLE with John Vt'senr F.IU Raines Chb Htp III A.L. Still Hopes for Russian Peace Washington, Nov. 10 OP) President Truman expressed the hope today that the United States can get along with Russia. He said he has always hoped that their problems will be worked out peaceably and con tinues to hope that this can be done. And he said the effort will be continued through regular diplomatic channels. This was his view when he was asked at his news confer ence about the meeting of the foreign ministers in Paris. The president said in response to questions today that he knew of no second atomic explosion in Russia. The president was asked at a news conference if he had any evidence of another Soviet at omic blast like the one he report ed Sept. 23. He said there has not been an other so far as he knows. Western Farm Crops Prices Washington, Nov. 10 OP) In only two western states have farmers bettered last year's fig ures for cash received from mar keting their crops and livestock. These are New Mexico and Washington. Income figures for the first nine months of this year as made available by the agricul ture department show a drop in livestock returns from all 11 states. New Mexico and Washington made up the loss in crop mar ketings. Idaho, Arizona and Washing ton also all reported larger in comes from this source in Sep tember, compared with the same month a year ago. Figures for the states (1948 in parentheses) include: Washington, livestock $136, 151,000 ($147,012,000); crops $242,426,000. Oregon, livestock " $106,183, 000 ($117,843,000); crops $130, 3 04,00 0 ($139,858,000); total $236,487,000 ($257,701,000). California, livestock $533,- 087,000 ($616,924,000); crops $824,713,000 ($861,965,000); to tal $1,357,800,000 ($1,478,889, 000). Aluminum Industry Expanded by Kaiser Houston, Nov. 10 (P) Henry J. Kaiser said today the nation's aluminum industry has a great future. The California industrialist said the main question about his role in the industry is "how far can we expand?" The Kaiser aluminum inter ests this month, he said, will turn out about 32.000,000 pounds of aluminum, compared to the previous monthly high of 24, 000.000. October production, he said, was 20 percent above his plant's normal capacity. "Aluminum is a new material of a new age," Kaiser said. "It is ENDS TODAY! (THUR.) PH. 3-37Z1 MATINEE FROM 1 P.M. TOMORROW! MAGNIFICENT SPECTACLE! Tre?Vw7tO'':ig CO-HIT! substituting now for other ma terials and also Is creating new products. In the automobile field alone its possibilities have not even been scratched." He said his plans for expan sion in the aluminum field are indefinite at present but that experiments are under way at his Baton Rouge, La., alumina plant. Experiments are being made there with raw materials being obtained from Jamaica in the British West Indies. ZontasToldof Hoover Plan The Hoover commission re port and recommendations and what can be accomplished with them through interested public support were discussed for the Zonta club's luncheon program Thursday noon by Dr. A. Free man Holmcr of the political sci ence department at Willamette university. Dr. Holmer outlined the his tory of the commission and its procedures of work, also he briefly touched on the recom mendations. "If we are to get anything out of the recommen dations of the commission there must be public Interest and sup port, and women's groups are in a position to give such inter est and support," the speaker said. Dr. Helen Pearce introduced the speaker. Special music in cluded whistling solos by Miss Marjorie Jordan, accompanied bv her mother, Mrs. Arthur Jordan. Miss Lena Belle Tar tar was program chairman for the day. A business session will be held in conjunction with the club luncheon next Thursday noon at the Golden Pheasant, Little Profanity of Tot No Cause for Alarm Los Angeles, Nov. 10 OP) If your youngster indulges in a lit tle mild profanity, don't be come alarmed and think you're rearing a problem child. So advises Dr. Benjamin Spock, author of the best sel ler "Baby and Child Care," and an associate professor of psy chiatry at the Mayo foundation. Dr. Spock said a purple pas sage or two is natural behavior in children over six years 01 age. It shows they are trying their wings in a bid for indepen dence. The halibut sometimes attains a size of nine feet and a weight of 700 pounds. Special$lDi Dinner SOUP SALAD COLE'S 4135 Portland Road Open 5 P.M. Week Days Sunday at Noon Crispy Fried Chicken French Fries - ROLL Home Made Pie or Ice Cream Coffee - Tea - Milk Betty Groble "Mother Wore Tights" and "DILLINGER" (AT REGULAR ADMISSIONS) Offers to Wed Persistant Lover Bremerton, Nov. 10 (P) A 34-year-old husband, whose wife is charged with attempting his murder to put an end to what she called his persistent love making, today dusted off an off side proposal of marriage. The husband, Wilford Piatt, showed reporters 1 letter which he received from New York City woman. Wilford," it read in part, I would never get tired of your love making." Piatt has said he wanted his wife back de p i t e her signed statement that she made a $324 down payment on an unfulfilled plot to have him killed. I'm not interested in any proposals unless the woman has enough money to help me get my wife out of jail," he said. The letter had been misdirect ed to Mrs. Margaret Piatt, held on $3500 bond. It was opened by sheriff's deputies as routine and forwarded to Piatt. The writer described herself Continuous Holiday Shows Tomorrow RIGHT NOW! And TIM HOLT in "THE STAGECOACH KID Last Diy! "ILLEGAL . ENTRY" "AIR HOSTESS" NEW TOMORROW! of the Season's Best! Kathryn Grayson Jose Iturbi Mario Lanza and FRED MacKURRiy . MAUREEN O'HARA Z 200O0'00 mm sale CONTINUES MERCON'S Large new lots added daily at special prices for this great sacrifice sale. Every department fea tured, men's, women's and children's dress, health, work, and sport shoes. DISCOUNTS RANGING FROM 10 -50 MERC0N SHOE CO. 357 State St. Formerly Style Arch Shoe Co. Next to Midget Mkt. as "38 years old, 1 grass widow for 14 years, with t pretty fig ure." Mrs. Piatt will be arraigned next Monday. Two Children Lose Lives in Home Fire Mountain View, Calif.. Nov. 10 uPi Two of ten children in a rural family burned to death early today in a fire of unreport ed origin which destroyed their home nearby. The mother, Mrs. Ynez Ando na, and two of the other children were burned severely. The six others escaped the flaming structure. Their father was away at the time. Burned to death were Joe, two, and John Andona, five. Snow in Mountains The state highway commis sion reported new snow in mountain passes today, but it said all roads are safe. It said the pavement is either bare or sanded on all roads. Thrill Co-Hit! Kieron Moore "A Man About the House" Salem's Show Bargain 35c FIRST RUN . HITS! NOW! Opens 6:45 P.M. m Charles Starrett "SOUTH OF DEATH VALLEY" j nw I I Last Times Tonight; I I Starts at t:45 P.M. I I I June Haver I I 1 1 Ray Bolger I I II In Technicolor If II "LOOK FOR THE I J I SILVER LINING" IL III Frances Rafferty i III Larry Olson III 111 "CURLEY" III 111 Carton - News III il I Now! Exciting " II The Picture of the Yeor! ! w sai rusa u warm Ill y urn MB-mm mum 0