2 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, January 31, 1950 79 Pints of Blood Donated In Salem Despite Cold Spell A total of 79 pints of blood was donated at "American Legion donor day" Monday when the mobile unit from the Portland regional blood center set up operations at the American Legion club. Although short of the hoped-for 100 pints, the total was rated "remarkable" by the unit, con sidering weather conditions. Up on arrival here at noon, the unit oficials said they did not expect to get more than 50 pints. The visitation was a special one arranged by Capital post No. 9, American Legion, the first time in the regional center a Legion post has sponsored a visit by the mobile unit. The blood program is a community (service approved by the Oregon department of the Legion. A majority of the donors Monday were Legion members. A large number of donors were "drop-ins," those unable to make previous appointments, and several were replacements for blood given friends or rela tives. Dr. W. L. Lidbeck of Sa lem was in charge of the unit for the visitation, the regular physician traveling with the unit being unable to attend Mon day. Several Legion auxiliary mem bers assisted at the visiation in looking after the donors. Mrs. Austin H. Wilson Sr., of the auxiliary was in charge of the nurses aides serving for the af ternoon and Mrs. Donald Madi son, also of the auxiliary, was In charge of the canteen. Regular monthly visitation of the unit to Salem will be Febru ary 14, operations to be carried on at the regular place, the First Methodist church. Salem Winners In Arts Awards Portland, Jan. 31 VP) Win ners in the fourth annual schol astic arts award exhibition were announced here today. Gold keys were awarded the 185 winners, who will be eligi ble to compete in the national scholastic arts event in spring. Portland entrants won the most prizes 105. Klamath Falls had 27, Salem 13. Winners Included: Salem Helen Black, Jean Burroughs, Vilma Carrow, Al ene Delke, Lanny Dlbbern, Es ther Graham, Connie Jean Hil ton, Louise Matter, Jack Schra der, Leona Schrocder, Clifford Stolle, Jim Shull, and Muriel Williams. Eugene Dave Hlbbard, San dy McCready, Jerry Moltzau, Joan Rainville, Dan Rowan, Fred Skinner and Roy Thorp. Grants Pass Ruth Ditto, Son dra Durrcnt, Jean Neilson, Earl John Robinson, Shirley Wildey, Peggy Martin and Ha zel Hanscom. Klamath Falls Wayne Angel, Dallas Baldwin, Kenneth Bar- kee, Wayne Bergloff, Diane Binkley, Howard Cain, Joyce Copeland, Donna Coulter, Shir ley Gaylord, Boyd Hanks, Phyl lis Kaup, Marjorie Miller, Lloyd Mullen, Dick Neibaur, Gloria Ncvbill, Paul Patterson, Bar bara Petty, Margaret Rodgers, Ingham Sabin, Betty Scott, Mark Simons, Leo Rita Wade, Clarence Welch, Gordon West, Don Westrom, Duane Wolfrum, and Michael Wong. Roseburg Claude Butler and Don Foster. -v :y., 5TV0 , I pt i Governor's Sailboat Governor Herman Talmadge of Geor gia studies a model sailboat built from used safety matches by two inmates of Tatnall prison, Reidsvillc, Ga and pre sented to Governor. Photo taken at hit office in Atlanta. L4S A Student Grandma Mrs. Anne E. Dash, 36, mother of two children and grandmoth er of two, pauses between Spanish classes at Baldwin Wallace college, Berea, Ohio. Says Big Stores Evading Taxes Washington, Jan. 31 (U.R) Rep. Noah M. Mason (R., 111.) charged today that "tax dodgers hiding behind tax exempt fronts" le gitimately beat the U.S. treas ury Qut of $1,000,000,000 in taxes each year. Mason named "lax exempt fronts" organized by corpora tions, churches, colleges, labor unions and cooperatives. Writing in the American magazine, he cited, among many, C. F. Mueller Co., one of the nation's largest macaroni pro ducers; R. H. Macy & Co., New York department store; Lit Bros., Philadelphia department store, and the giant $60,000,000 Textron Corp., as being involved in what Mason called "deals" with charitable or educational groups which permit them to escape paying some taxes. "I am not criticizing the or ganizations that make these profits by taking advantage of the laws," Mason wrote . , . "It is the law that needs changing." President Truman has called on congress to plug such loop holes, particularly where char itable and educational groups are concerned. Mason said that a "spectacu lar example" of the way tax laws permit business profits to go untaxed is the California & Hawaii Sugar Refining com pany. He says the company pays no taxes, although it "makes mil lions of dollars in profits," be cause it is a cooperative. He said businessmen dominate the com pany, but since they also own plantations they have formed farmers' co-op and the company has not paid "a federal income tax since 1027." The U. S. Department of Agri culture recommends the use of lindane, a new Insecticide, to control flies in dairy barns and milk plants. TTT7 A V m.mmt I 3 ' CoatesDueto Meet Council Robert Coates of Portland is expected in Salem Tuesday aft ernoon to attend an emergency meeting of the city council set for 5:15 o'clock p.m. A location has been found lhat will be suitable to Coates for his apartment house project, and suitable also to the state capitol planning commission and to the city council which is try ing to cooperate with the com mission in the capitol zone ex tension. The exact location will be re vealed at the council meeting which is called to consider waiver of set-back line require ments. Plans for the project must remain substantially ai they are now if the FHA ap proves transter Irom the pres ent location at 555 North Sum mer street to the new location. It is understood the lot is in a zone that permits apartment house construction. At the request of Alderman David O'Hara, who will be act ing mayor in the absence of Mayor Elfstrom, City Recorder Alfred Mundt contacted coun cil members Tuesday morning and reported that a quorum would no doubt be present. Coates is to arrive from Port land about mid-afternoon. Bidault Wins Confidence Vote Paris, Jan. 31 VP) The French national assembly today approv ed a record budget for 1950 and gave Premier George Bidault a new vote of confidence. The final vote was reported unofficially as 300 to 284, the widest margin for Bidault in a scries of five confidence votes on his budget policies upon which he staked his three months bid government. The budget, as finally approv ed, calls for expenditures of 2,238,000,000,000 francs (about $6,300,000,000) and receipts of 2,118,000,000,000 francs, leav ing a deficit of 20 billion francs which the government promised to make up by economies. It was Bidault s fourth clear- cut vote of confidence of the day. On another issue the assembly vote had been a tie, but par liamentarians rules the govern ment had not lost on the confi dence issue. Aurora Church Plans Approved Aurora Members of Christ Lutheran church of Aurora, at a recent meeting approved plans for a new church building sub mitted by the planning com mittee. Construction is expected to start in the spring months. The new structure will be located on property purchased last year, adjacent to the present church on Second street in Aurora. James lit Payne, Salem archi tect, is preparing the detailed plans. The committee proposes to build the church in two units, starting with a two-story edu cational wing which will have facilities for considerably more than 200 Sunday school pupils. The main church building is planned for a seating capacity of approximately 275, with over flow seating available for an ad ditional 120. Lions at Lebanon Set Charity Carnival Lebanon The Lions club has begun preparation for the char ity carnival in the high school February 10 and 11, with nine acts already booked. Burleigh Cash, general chairman, an nounced names for 26 commit tees of two to six men to work out details. All proceeds will be used to purchase playground equipment tor tne city playground, now un der construction at Grant and Hiatt streets. Included in the overall program is a Softball diamond, swings, slides, teeters. fireplaces, picnic tables and turf games. The area will be land scaped. Sheridan Receiving City Mail Delivery oneriaan postmaster Wayne Flynn announced this week that city delivery of mail would be gin February 16. The deliveries will be made from the post of fice at 8 a.m. and 1:45 p.m. The two new city carriers will be John Wilson, who will serve the business district and the north side of the river, and David Yoder, who will serve the south side of the river and also deliver the parcel post. The concrete posts for the small street letter boxes have not yet arrived, but large col lection boxes will be placed stra tegically in town for letters. A new type of radiation de tector, used by scientists to warn of the presence of dangerous rays, is shaped like a long barreled pistol. I . - fCli j Siamese Family Simmy III and Sahra, Siamese cats owned by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Walters, of Rome, N. Y.. preside over ceremony as their nine-weeks old kittens pose for first portraits. Find Search Plane Remains With Crew in Sleeping Bags By GRAHAM TROTTER (Canadian PreM Staff Writer) Whitehorse, Y. T., Jan. 31 (CP) Smashed on a lonely moun tain top, we found the remains of a Dakota search plane in the early-morning darkness today with two of its injured crew and a passenger huddled in sleeping bags a short distance away. None was critically hurt. They had been dragged from the Ranch Auction Expects Crowd Independence Dan B. Roth and Larry Roth of Albany will be the auctioneers Wednesday morning at 9:30 o'clock when thousands of dollars worth of farm equipment will go on the auction block at a public sale at the Golden Gate Ranch, 4 miles south of Independence. H. F. Moritz, the new owner of the ranch, is going to dispose of some of the surplus property and equipment he has on hand, after selling his Linn county ranch and buying the Golden Gate holdings with all its equip ment. Nine tractors head a loftg list of farm machinery to be sold. Several buildings and some res taurant and office equipment will also be offered. Since this sale is to be one of the largest of its kind to be held in western Oregon in recent years, it is expected that buyers from all over the Willamette valley will attend. The Look Out Ladies' club of Plainview and the Buena Vis ta Women's club will serve lunch. 2,000 Gallon Tank Of Solvent Explodes Los Angeles, Jan. 31 (fP) Ex plosion of a 2,000-gallon tank of solvent touched off an oil proc essing plant fire. Flames and billowing smoke, visible 50 miles away, attracted many mo torists and created a huge traf fic jam. Ten fire companies battled the flames for four hours last night. The blast blew the heavy top of the tank 300 feet into the air, It plummeted through the roof of a nearby iron foundry plant, scattering flaming solvent over a 100-yard area, damaging sev eral parked autos. Stockmen Protest Meat Inspection Law Corvallis, Jan. 31 P) Dele gates to the Western Oregon Livestock association meeting inspected Oregon State college animal husbandry buildings to day. New barns will be dedi cated by the group tomorrow. Committees yesterday discuss ed marketing, grading and leg islative problems to submit to the Wednesday assembly of the 14th annual convention. A resolutions committee pro tested the proposed compulsory meat inspection and grading ordi nance for meat sold in Portland. Members favored the existing voluntary grading system for beef, veal and lamb. irmuT.'tnifl ENDS TODAY! BROUGHT BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND onmuu, tJULUVTTH fntmtx GARY COOPER THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES TEKSA WRIGHT WALTER BREWUN "TALL IN THe"sADDI.E" John W7ti - Ella Raloaa Oabhy Hayfi Pl&Jlin I A I mi tun mil in liJiWiMimii plane immediately after it crash ed into the trees 100 yards from the mountain peak at 12:15 p.m. (CST) yesterday. Two uninjured crew members were stoking a huge campfire to keep the men warm as the rescue party staggered into the clearing after a two and a half hour trek past jagged precipices through waist deep snow and over rocky crags. It was an eight-mile trek from a point on the Carcross highway 21 miles south of here to the crash scene and we had to climb 3,000 feet to reach the plane. All the rescue party wore snowshoes, and two of the hus kiest plowed ahead to break trail along the marks left by the pilot, Lt. Charles R. Harden, in his heroic plunge through the forest to get help. The rescue party dragged stretcher-sleds loaded with med ical supplies, blankets and food through the fantastically rugged wilderness. In spots, we scram bled along the edge of cliffs that dropped a sheer 40 or 50 feet into the valley hanging onto overhanging tree limbs. By the time we got near the crash scene, the search party doctors, Maj. Gordon Fisher and capt. Henry Krawczyk from Camp Carson, Colo., had given first aid to the survivors. They also bundled them well In sleep ing bags there were plenty of those and strapped stretchers to sleds for the return trip. It was hard to believe how Lt. Harden, his face broken and bleeding, had fought his way to the highway over that rugged country. The crew told us how the plane, searching for the miss ing U. S. transport with 44 per sons on board, had been caught in a down draft as it skimmed low over the treetops. The airspeed fell from 140 miles an hour to 70 and Harden knew if he gunned the motor the machine might plow into the mountain. As it was, it came down almost like a helicopter, slicing off i few trees as it spun complete ly around. It was demolished. Some of the chopped-off trees fell on the plane. One huge tun ber cut it in half like a giant scimitar. All the men aboard were hurl ed into the front of the machine The three injured were unable to move. As gasoline spilled over the plane from one of the motors, tne other crew mem bers seized the injured and haul ed them to safety. But there was no fire. Lebanon Lloyd Moody, 19, of Lebanon is in the city jail serving out a $15 fine assessed in city court on charges of oper ating a motor vehicle without a driver's license. According to police records, Moody was rested November 30 but failed to appear in court. ENDS TONIGHT: "THE GREAT NEW TOMORROW VIRGINIA MAYO GORDON MacRAE EDMOND O'BRIEN VIVECA LINDFORS DANE CLARK lfflr Brevity James Million "SNOW CARNIVAL" Mary Beth Hughes In wth Gan c "RIMFIRE" j Adair Water for State College Portland, Jan. 31 The state board of higher education today approved committee recommen dations of yesterday, told Ore gon State college to accept the Camp Adair water and sewage system, and accepted the resig nation of Clifford F. Weigel, journalism dean at the Univer sity of Oregon. . The Camp Adair system is a million and a. half dollar gift present from the war assets administration. Board approval was necessary before the college would accept it. E. B. Lemon, dean of admin istration at OCS, told the board the gift completes the college's aquisition of former Camp Adair property. Already under way transfer of 90 acres west of highway 99-W for use of the school of forestry, and transfor mation of the camp hospital into a student housing center. The water and sewage system will be used by the engineering school in working on enginer-: ing problems. Weigel, head of the univer sity's journalism school for the past two years, resigned to be come assistant director of the Stanford university institute for journalistic studies. Committee reports which got board approval today included the granting of an undergrad uate major and denial of a graduate major in physical ed ucation in Oregon State college, and retention of elementary teacher training in the hands of the three colleges of educa tion. Portland school officials had sought extension training of elementary teachers. By unanimous vote the board approved construction of a mil lion ana a hall dollar science building program approved by committee yesterday. Some ec onomies, such as elimination of a few classrooms and combina tion of some laboratories, were ordered. Other building projects ap proved include a library at Or egon College of Education and a library-museum at Eastern Oregon College of Education. Twins Receive Honors Hubbard Misses Gloria and Glorene Hostetler, twin daugh ters of Mr. and Mrs. Rollo Hos tetler, Hubbard, are among those on the honor rolls at Ore gon College of Education, Mon mouth. Gloria was one of the 31 placing on the first honor roll for completion of 15 term hours with a grade point aver age of 3.5 On the second honor holl with a grade point average of 3.0 was Glorene. "Prince Of Foxes" and Forbidden Street" TOMORROW! Gary Cooper Helen Hayes In "A FAREWELL TO ARMS" and Edw. G. Robinson Lorctta Younff in HATCHET MAN" LOVER" and "BLACK MIDNIGHT" Pacific Power Bids Now Due New York, Jan. 31 VP) American Power & Light Co. prepared today to receive bids for the controlling stock of Pa cific Power Si Light Co. of Port land, Ore. The securities and exchange commission has scheduled a ses sion in Washington tomorrow to rule on any bids received by American for 500,000 shares of common stock of the $77,000, 000 west coast utility. American Power & Light, a holding com pany, controls Pacific. The SEC hearing was to have been held today, but was post poned for one day at the re quest of Howard L. Aller, presi dent of American Power & Light. Aller had been asked by an investment banking group headed by B. J. Van Ingen & Co. for additional time in which to consider making a competi tive bid.. Another banking syndicate, headed by Allen & Co., is ex pected to enter a bid before the SEC hearing opens. Last Friday the SEC rejected two proposals to buy the Pa cific stock on the ground com petitive conditions were not maintained in negotiating for the sale. It ruled, however, it would reconvene to hear any proposals received under com petitive conditions. The rejected offers were those of the Van Ingen group, which called for a $14,500,000 cash payment and an additional con tingent sum not to exceed $5, 000,000, and one from the Allen group, which named a $15,000,- 000 cash payment. An Allen spokesman said yes terday his group was prepared to make a formal restatement of its original offer in submit ting a competitive bid. A Van Ingen spokesman said that syn dicate had not decided what ac tion to take. 'Speed' Benson Gets First Hawaiian Marlin To L. V. (Speed) Benson of Salem fell the honor of catching the first marlin of the year in Hawaiian waters off Kona. The Honolulu Advertiser of January 26 has a three-column picture of Benson and party and the fish, which Is a whopper at 222 pounds. Says the caption to the pic ture: "The 222-pound marlin shown above was brought to gaff joint ly by Li. v. Benson of Salem, Ore., and E. Spreckelmier of In dianapolis off the Kona coast re cently. It was the first marlin landed this year in that area. Proudly displaying the huge fish are Paul McElwain, Coos Bay, Ore.; Spreckelmier, Benson, Glen McCormick of Salem. Ore.. and George Pelecane of the char ter boat Malia. McCormick and Pelecane are shown holding the mahimahi that were caught on the trip." ENDS TODAY! (TUE.) PHONE 3-3721 Tomorrow! Two Roaring Adventures Return To Thrill Anew! CARY GRANT JOAN FONTAINE DOUG. FAIRBANKS, JR. VICTOR McLAGLEN WAIUCE UtwkK hwtxctf Cliff Colorviscd Blonde Eileen Cnrisiopherson gives out with a big smile as the television camera moves in for a close-up during a color television dem onstration in San Francisco. Selected by Color Television, Inc., as "Miss Color Television of the West Coast," she will be featured in color TV tests scheduled before the federal, communications commission in Washington, D. C, Feb. 20. (Acme Telephoto) Overlund Has Attack Silverton Edwin OverluncTjC entered Silverton hospital near ' noon Monday suffering from a heart condition which first af fected him Saturday. He was not able to be moved from his Church street home for two days. ' JOHN WAYHE I John ISM Mek MAM Forrest TIICKEI ENDS TODAY! 6:45 P.M. Humphrey Bogart "SAHARA" Ed. G. Robinson "DESTROYER" TOMORROW! Bud Abbott Lou Costello "RIDE 'EM COWBOY" "KEEP 'EM FLYING" I Mat. Daily from 1 P.M. Will Rogers, "STEAMBOAT ROUND THE BEND" & "DAVID HARUM" OPENS 6:45 P.M. Flaming Co-hit! Orama of men lost to themselves . . . and to the women thev love! FORD REGINALD DENNY JOHN FORD Production IEI0 MER1AM I COOftl farattw hutat