12 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, Dec. 20, 1949 Vis-..- , k XJw-'Tt" Mall Call Potty Grover, 8, of Camden, N. J., smiles happily as she reads one of thousands of cards and letters that have come to her since her mother, Mrs. Dorothea Grover, wife of an unemployed welder wrote a Camden newspaper that extra Christmas cards would make the Invalid child happy. Patty, who has suffered from asthma most of her life, has piled on her bed bundles of letters and cards and some of the gifts that have come with them to her home at 921 Howard street. (AP Wirephoto) LOVE MAY WIN YET Duke's Daughter Slides Down Bed sheet Into Arms of Lover Madrid. Spain. Dec. 20 VP) A dawn elopement by a duke's daughter who slid down a bedsheet rope to the arms of her handsome bullfighter boy friend was frustrated this last week nd by an angry papa. But love may win out, after all. The lady is Angclita Perez de Soane, 18-year-old daughter of the Duke of Pinohermoso The duke opposed her marriage to a 24-year-old bullfighter, Luis Miguel Gonzales, known to bull ring fans as Dominguin. Angelita wrote Dominguin a fortnight ago that her ducal pa pa was about to put her in a convent to block the match. The letter brought Dominguin back from a Caracas, Venezuela, bull ring. Early Saturday morning An- felita slid down a sheet from her edroom. Dominguin left her with some friends who chap eroned her while the suitor fu tllely tried to get a marriage license. The duke meanwhile spent his Saturday complaining to the police. The officers finally ar rested Angelita's hosts for kid napping. In the stormy scene that fol lowed in Madrid's police head quarters, Angelita insisted she had not been kidnapped, she'd left of her own free will. Dom inguin said he regretted the es capade. The duke admitted he, too, had acted hastily. Angelita was back home to day, but the word went around Madrid's gossiping society cir cles that the duke probnbly will permit the match after a little more convincing from Domin guin. Madrid society thinks the nuptials will take place In time to permit the bridegroom to ap pear In a Quito, Ecuador, bull ring on January 10. The duke should be getting used to bull fgihters In the fam ily. Another of his daughters married Toreador Domingo Or tega In 1938. ' Km A ' M Mao's Trip to Moscow Shows Stalin's Policy Supreme in Asia (Editor's Note: John Roderick, AP correspondent now stationed in London, spent several months in 1946 as the only United States correspondent in Mao Tze-tung's remote cave capital at Yenan. He became acquainted with Mao and reported the inner workings of the struggling Chinese red regime. Following is derived from his background experience there.) By JOHN RODERICK London, Dec. 20 VP) Mao Tze-Tung, the west's favorite can didate for an Oriental Tito, has made his first known trip out side his native China to pay personal homage to the man he frequently has said he reveres Joseph Stalin. Only last summer one Yugoslav leader said he expected the Chinese communists that lion-- maned Mao rules to follow Pre mier-Marshal Tito's example of rebellion against the Kremlin. A month ago another top Yu goslav party strategist said he foresaw an eventual conflict be tween Moscow and Mao's gov ernment in Peiping. A segment of the western world has shared this feeling, a feeling that is more of a hope than a conviction. Mao could have let the caul dron of speculation bubble by staying in Peiping's winter pa lace and keeping an oriental si lence. But despite frail health, he arrived in Moscow last night after an eight to ten day Jour ney over the trans-Siberian rail way, in time for Stalin's birth day next Wednesday. In a speech upon his arrival in Moscow, the Chinese Red leader said strengthening of re lations and friendship between China and Soviet Russia were among the most important prob lems of the moment. He added that thanks to the correct inter national policy of Stalin, these and other tasks would be reali zed in full. His visit underlines the solid arity of Marxist and Stalinist communism in the Far East. The hammer and sickle never seem ed more powerful in Asia than it does today. Mao, unlike many of his dis ciples and colleagues, never travelled abroad. His education as a historian and philosopher came in Chinese schools. His dynamic prime minister, Chou En-lai, studied in France and speaks a smattering of Eng lish. Mao's commander-in-chief, aging General Chu Teh, visited Russia in the mid-1920's. Mao's 'visit gives the chance for Moscow and Peiping to blue print the future of communism in the Far East. In this, the peasant's soon who became one of the most powerful of the world's leaders may take no back seat to Stalin. Mao has his own ideas of what to do inside China, where his forces are concentrating on a policy of agrarian reform and evelopment in contrast to Rus sia's emphasis on the industrial proletariat. But in international affairs Mao is viewed as ready to lend a sympathetic ear. Even before he came to power over 450 mil lion Chinese, his pronounce ments and those of Moscow had a decidely similar ring. One of the chief subjects he will discuss either with Stalin or with Russian ministers prob ably will be China's attitude toward Britain and the United States, if and when they recog nize the Peiping government. Another probably will be the decision of how slow or how fast to go at turning Peiping into an eastern Moscow and Mao himself into an Asiatic Lenin. Asia's millions, in the commu nists eyes, are only waiting for the word. A. P. President Dies New York, Dec. 20 U.R Da vid T. Bofinger, president of the great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., died Monday while attend ing a luncheon at the Hotel Biltmore. Bofinger, 63, collapsed at his table. Cause of death appeared to be a heart attack. Kreugen Put On Probation Edward H. Kreugen, 958 Highland avenue, Monday re ceived a suspended one-year jail sentence in circuit court, was placed under three years proba tion and fined $500 for contrib uting to the delinquency of a minor girl at Hillcrest school for girls. In Salem district court he was sentenced to pay a fine of $150, given a suspended six-months jail sentence and placed on pro bation for a year for aiding the same girl to escape from the school. Kruegen worked as a carpen ter at the school and was con victed recently at a jury trial for aiding the girl to escape August 3. Henry G. Walp, Detroit, who had entered a plea of guilty to passing a worthless check at Mill City, was continued for sen tence to December 23. Orvil Edward Nelson, Colfax, Wash., transient and army vet eran of World War II, charged with passing a worthless check was released until February 1, 1950, so he may undergo surgery at U.S. veterans' hospital in Portland. He had pleaded his In nocence to the check charge. Postmistress in Powers Indicted Portland, Dee. 20 VP) A post mistress under indictment for misusing federal funds was free today on $1,000 bond. U. S. Commissioner Robert A. Leedy said Mrs. Gwendolyn H. Stammerman, 44, postmistress at Powers, Ore., the past six years had appeared here yester day voluntarily. She was indict ed secretly earlier. The commissioner said the woman was accused of personal use of $717.20 of postal funds. He said the woman explained her adding machine was faulty and that she bad held up COD's to cover the shortages. The U.S. navy's first subma rine was stubby and cigar-shaped. ., ; uif Kindness Repaid Paul Ha ruo Kasai, 16-year-old Jap anese youth, is all smiles as he arrived in San Francisco, aboard the President Cleve land, en route to Greybill, Wyo., where he will attend school. He will live with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schmidt who will finance the boy's educa tion as repayment for a debt of gratitude. Schmidt, now a building contractor, was a pris oner of the Japanese at Osaka and was given food by Paul, then only 11. (AP Wirephoto) Scotts Mills Garden Club Is Entertained Scotts Mills Mrs. Maud Doo little was hostess to the Scotts Mills Garden club held at the IOOF hall. Members of the Mt. Angel Garden club were guests. Other guests included Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lucht of Mt. Angel, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Furshong, Mrs. Paul Splonski, Mrs. Margaret Splonski, Mrs. Joe Bielenberg and Mrs. Marion Groshong and daughter. O. H. Brougher gave a talk on the transplanting of wild shrubs and lilies. He also pre sented the club with a gavel made from native maplewood. The January meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Wanda Edlund of Monitor. 'Hot Lollipop' Billy Cole man Beavers, Jr., (above), 10-monlhs-old, innocently plays with the business end of his mother's electric Iron cord shortly after he was brought home from an Atlanta, Ga., hospital. Several hours earlier he had been playing with the same cord and, baby-like, stuck it in his mouth when, WHAM! he was knocked out mama had forgotten to pull the other end from the recep ticle. He regained conscious ness at the hospital, was treat ed for burns and shock and dismissed. (AP Wirephoto) Nothing Like Christmas Spirit? Charley Knows That There Is Philadelphia, Dec. 20 VP) Don't tell Charley Willis there's no such thing as Christmas spirit. Charley works in the Philadelphia Inquirer library. Months go, he and his fellow workers decided to chip in a quarter each a week to create a Christmas party fund. The name Sun- hinp pluh wn rhnsen. 9 Two months ago, Charley's 8-year-old daughter was critic aliy burned in a gas stove mis hap. Without taking a formal vote, the Sunshine club gave Charley the $160 in the club treasury to help defray medical expenses. And the scheduled party at a Philadelphia restaurant was can celled. Restauranteur Frank Palum bo heard the story and tonight Charley his daughter well on the road to recovery will join his friends at the party they planned, with Palumbo picking up the check. Now available again... our own original OLD CHARTER W Distilled by Old Charter Bottled by Old Charter tw Shipped straight to Oregon from Old Charter's Louisville Distillery The Whiskey that didn't watch the clock! torn. . Mi. HV ft rfl W If - JrfyrSWW 6 YEARS OLD ) OLD CHARTER Kentucky's Fine$t Straight Bourbon STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 86 PROOF lERNHEIM DISTILLING COMPANY, INC., LOUISVILLE. KY. ,J Brady Lays Down Gavel in Huff Portland, Dec. 20 (P) Team ster Phil Brady presided last night at his last AFL Portland Central Labor council meeting since he took over the job of president IS years ago. He didn't lay down the gavel quietly, either. Brady took a verbal fling at what he said were "carping critics and mudsling ers" who opposed his tenure. He was recently defeated by a write-in candidate of the Elec trical Workers' union in the an nual election. His successor, RdSf F. Renoud, takes office in Jan uary. Brady laid at rest any ideas the teamsters might pull out of the council and the state federa tion. He said the union would continue to work with both la bor organizations. GIVE HER "CAREFREE WASHDAYS" With a New MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHER $289? WILL GIVE CHRISTMAS EVE DELIVERY Come in for a Free Demonstration Open Every Night 'Til Chriitmai I WILLAMETTE VALLEY'S LEADING APPLIANCE S HOME FURNISHERS SALEM OREGON CITY 115 S. Comm'l. 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