2V g f jf.:- l ft .J fit : v Marine Memorial for Virginia Sculptor Felix Weihs de Weldon on ladder works on Marine corps memorial based on noted wartime AP picture of Iwo Jima flag-raising taken by Joe Rosenthal. The bronze group will stand on a hill between Washington and Mount Vernon. Farm Laborer I Held for Murder Colfax, Wash., Jan. 4 (P) A 27-year-old farm laborer was charged with first degree mur der yesterday for the shotgun claying of his former employer. Sheriff Clarence Davis said the charge was filed after Grant E. Rio of Spokane told him: "I must have been the man who did it. But I was drinking heavily and don't remember anything about it." James Beckner, 20, the farm er, and a hired hand, Joseph Ro berge, 25, were killed early last Saturday morning at the Beck ner farm near Riparia. Rio was arrested later the same day while driving Beckner's pickup truck. An exchange of goods with a total value of $25,000,000 is provided for in a one year trade arrangement to expire Aug. 1, 1950, between Occupied-Japan md Western Germany. Former Wac Shoots Husband on Dare Pittsburgh, Jan. 4 VP) A plump former WAC told police she shot and killed her husband of six months after he told her "women are too dumb to use a gun." Police said they found John Howrylchak, 35-year-old steel worker, dying on the kitchen floor of his father-in-law's butt galow yesterday after Mrs. Dor othy Ziegler Howrylchak, 29, tel ephoned them "I just shot my husband. 1 Howrylchak died as he was being carried from the house. 1949 Biggest Year in Air Traffic of United States Nlnteen hundred and forty-nine was the biggest year the air lines of the United States have ever had, according to a report of the civil aeronautics administration Airlines attracted an estimated 16,500,000 passengers during the year and flew a total of about 460,000,000 miles. Their planes completed more trips due- to the increasing use of the CAA's instrument landing sys tem at 87 sites in the United States. The combined safety rate of U.S. domestic and international airlines is 1.0 passenger fatali ties per 100,000,000 passenger miles flown, the lowest in his tory. On international routes, there were no passenger fatalities. Al though 93 passengers were killed in four domestic accidents, com pared with 83 in five accidents during 1948, the rate in terms of passenger miles flown equalled last year's 1.3, close to the all time low of 1.2. Manufacture of personal planes was down an estimated 52 per cent with 3,525 units made in 1949 as compared to 7,302 last year. Total number of U.S. aircraft registered dropped from 95,997 in 1948 to 92,700. This was due partially to the fact that the CAA audited its records to eliminate planes that had been put out of use. At the year's end an esti mated 510,000 certified pilots were recorded while in 1948 there wore 491,306. New pri vate pilot licenses and student pilot certificates showed reduc tions. Only 45,000 student permits were issued in 1949 compared with 117,725 in 1948 and the pri vate pilot certificate issuances were 30,000 as against 86,838. Commercial pilot certificates dropped from 8,151 to 7,300 and air transport pilot certificates from 1,100 to 1,000. A count of women pilots was made for the first time in four years and showed an increase from 5.122 in 1945, to 9,678 in 1049. The inventory also showed 1.811 women rated as air traf fic control operators and 400 as parachute technicians, about 20 per cent of the total ratings in these specialties. The number of airports in operation held about even with an estimated 6,100 at year's end compared to 6,016 at the end of 1948. An estimated 475 airports were closed during the year. Accidents in non-air carrier flying indicated a poorer saftey record for the year than in 1948, with 4,000 of the estimated 6,000 accidents analyzed. Of the 4,000 accidents ana lyzed 421 were fatal, while in 1948 there were 392 fatal acci dents in the first 4,000. In structional flying, which drop ped sharply in 1949, accounted for 26.4 per cent of the 4.000 ac cidents in 1949, and in 1948 it was 40.4 per cent. The percent age of non - commercial acci dents, i.e., private flying, rose from 53 per cent in 1948 to 58.5 per cent in 1949. Texas Millionaire In Assault Suit Beverly Hills, Cal., Jan. 4 (U.R) Texas millionaire Glenn Mc Carthy has been served with a summons in connection with a $210,000 damage suit in which a sports promoter accused him of assault, he said today. "A man telephoned me Sat urday and said he had the pa pers, so I told him to come around and serve them," Mc Carthy said through a spokesman. The suit was filed Oct. 1 by Larry Rummans, 39, who ac cused McCarthy of beating him and falsely imprisoning him in McCarthy's Shamrock hotel at Houston, Tex., from Sept. 22 to Sept. 24. Rummans contended the al leged beating followed an ar gument over his promotion, for McCarthy, of a professional foot ball game between the Ail- American conference champions and an AAC All-Star team. 0. B. Robertson, Ex-Senator, Dies Portland, Jan. 4 MP) Former State Senator O. B. Robertson, 70, retired banker and wool merchant widely known in north central Oregon, died at a hospi tal here yesterday after a long illness. He had been living in re cent years at Agate Beach. A native of Turner, he first entered business at Fossil after attending the University of Ore gon. Later he moved to Portland and then was in banking at Con don and Mitchell. In 1920 he op erated a large Gilliam county sheep ranch and managed the Columbia basin wool warehouse in that county. He was a state senator from Gilliam, Sherman and Wheeler counties during the 1921-23 re gular and special sessions. His widow, Helen, of Agate Beach, and a daughter, Mrs. Ber nadine R. Richards, Yamhill, and a son, Jack L., San Francisco, survive. Tiny Sheila, Cancer-Stricken, In N. Y. in Fight on Blindness New York, Jan. 4 (U.R) Eleven-months-old Sheila Reno, with cancer in both her eyes, grinned and laughed at reporters and photographers at Newark airport Tuesday as she arrived with her mother for treatment they hope may aid her fight against oiinancss ana death. Mrs. Louis Reno, 37, who brought her baby here from El Monte, Calif., where she was born with tumors in her eyes, was smiling, too. 'At last," she said as she stepped off the plane. "At last we're here. I never knew people could be so wonderful." The child's flight to a New York specialist was financed through contributions from a service club, a newspaper and the Reno family's friends and neighbors. Sheila's father and older brother, Gary, 9, remain ed at home. Mrs. Reno and Sheila were taken to New York by an Amer- Juveniles Are Nabbed Shoplifting Charges Lebanon In a growing wave of shoplifting, two more were apprehended Saturday, both juvenile boys. Merchandise taken was recovered, although state police were summoned to arrest the lads who had left town. They appeared before po lice over the week-end. Both were released after police held a conference with their parents. Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Wednesday, Jan. 4, 19503 ican Airlines official to meet Mrs. Reno's brother, Robert E. Miles of Forest Hills, with whose family they will stay. Mrs. Reno said she did not know whether Sheila would be placed in a hospital or would be treated in the office of the specialist who has agreed to try to save the child. She said the physician who treated the child in Los Angeles had given up hope of saving her from the cancer which he said was the rarest case he had encountered in 35 years of practice. The El Monte Lions club and the Pasadena Independent help ed finance the trip here. r NOW! HOTEL MARION RESTAURANT SERVICE IN THE MARINE ROOM 9a During the Complete Renewing of Our Coffee Shop o D o J SCHLESINGER & COS Never in the History of Apparel Sales Have Such Great Values Been Offered in Nationally Known Women's Apparel. We are Heavily Stocked with Cloth Coats, Fur Coats, and Dresses from America's Finest Makers and We Must Move This Stock to Make Room for Spring Merchandise. You will be delighted at these astounding values we now offer at this record-breaking Clearance Sale. FUR COATS Just an Example 1 Group Values Up to 249.00 Take them away at ....... CLOTH COATS One Big Group. Values to 59.00 Go at 29. SUITS One Group Fine Quality Suits Reduced as Much as Vi off. Only 29 FUR COATS Another Group! Take Them Away at ...... 69 CLOTH COATS One Big Group Go At Only . . 39. SUITS One Group To Go at Only 3 DRESSES Beautiful Street Drettet Reduced to a Near Fraction. One Group 5. DRESSES One Group Go At . . . . 7. FUR COATS Another Giveaway! Group of Expensive Furs . . . 139. CLOTH COATS One Big Group Go At 49. SUITS One Group Goes at Only 49. DRESSES One Group Go Out at. Several Groups Slightly Higher! MILLINERY Vi OFF ONE GROUP RAINCOATS Values to 22.95, Closeout 9.99 22 UMBRELLAS Values to 10.00, Closeout 3.99 BLOUSES Originally to 6.98, Now 3.99 Originally to 8.98, Now 4.99 No Exchanges or Refunds & & c, 409 COURT All Sales Final!