Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 31, 1950, Page 3, Image 3

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Small Hero Paul Frank Bacon, 10, rests in bed at his
home in Burbank, Calif., after a dynamite cap explosion at
school inflicted 50 cuts on his chest, abdomen, arms and legs.
Paul sighted the burning cap in a locker. He picked it up,
ran to the door and was about to throw it out when the cap
exploded. Police said his action saved several students from
being hurt. (AP Wirephoto)
, Time Stopped for Ancient City
With Wartime Knockout Raids
By JAMES DEVLIN
Kassel. Germany, Jan. 31 W) World War II seems like only
yesterday in the ruins of this bomb-blasted German city.
Bodies still lie beneath uncleared rubble almost five years
after the war. The "graves" are marked by weather-beaten
wreaths and crosses placed atop levelled homes by friends and
-relatives.
Kassel suffered its mortal
blow on October 22. 1943. Brit
ish bombers attacked that night
with high explosive and fire
bombs. German officials say
that 20,000 Kasselers were killed
and half the city wrecked in an
hour and a half.
By the end of the war, the
city was 78 per cent ruined by
German calculations, 68 per cent
by allied figures.
Asks U. S. Mercy Zygmunt
Figlerowicz, 20-year-old Pol
ish refugee, surrendered to
San F r a n c i sco immigration
authorities as an illegal en
trant with, the hope that the
U. S. government would "un
derstand." Figlerowicz, born
in Grudziadz, Poland, was in
terned by the Germans in
1939. He escaped and met in
vading Americans, who advis
ed him to come to the U. S.
Using a Canadian seaman's
birth certificate, he made his
way to Montreal and then
drifted to San Francisco. "If
you send me back to Poland,
it will mean 10 or 15 years in
jail,' he said. (Acme Tele-photo)
School Employes in
Portland Better Paid
Portland, Jan. 31 (m City
school employes won a fight last
night to have a $200 cost-of-liV'
ing allowance paid last year add
ed to their basic minimum and
maximum salary scales.
The school directors voted 4
to 2 after a two-hour special
session with representatives of
the teachers, clerks and janitor
ial workers.
The new minimums provide
$2,600 minimum and $4,300
maximum for teachers with
bachelor degrees; $2,800 mini
mum and $4,700 maximum for
those with master degrees.
Card Plans Changed
Silverton The card party
planned by Delbert Reeves un
it No. 7 American Legion aux
iliary, for Tuesday evening, a
postponement from Monday eve
ning, has ' now been postponed
indefinitely, or until the weath
er moderates, by the committee
in charge, Mrs. Lewis Hall, Mrs
Oscar Edlund and Mrs. George
Towe.
Regardless of which figure
you use, the 1000-year-old, his
toric city in the northeast cor
ner of the American zone pre
sents an almost endless pan
orama of gaunt, ghostly build
ings. .
Somehow people still live
here. There are lights in struc
tures that still stand. Stores
have been built some just one
story affairs built in slots
carved in the rubble.
Germans will tell you the big
British raid was in retaliation
for the German bombing of
Coventry. Allies point out Kas
sel was headquarters of .the 11th
German army, a huge railway
yard, and the home of the Hen
schel works probably the larg
es? locomotive factory in Eu
rope.
During the war, it made guns
and tanks. This plant, never
knocked out entirely, reputedly
sent tanks with their paint still
wet directly into battle as the
American army approached the
city.
The Henschel works and two
other Kassel factories making
railway passenger cars and
freight cars are back in business
at about 50 per cent capacity
Henschel is contracting to build
locomotives for South Africa
as well as for German use.
Also still standing amid the
devastation are some of the sev
en huge office and barracks
buildings the German army oc
cupied in Kassel.
German officials simply shrug
wnen asked when the recon
Bank Stock Sale
Issue in Lebanon
Albany, Ore., Jan. 31 W)
Profits from the sale of 122
shares of stock in the First Na
tional Bank of Lebanon were at
issue in a suit here involving two
members of a prominent Linn
county family.
James Powell Garland, Wash
ington, D.C., son of the late Sam
uel M. Garland, has sued his
cousin, Hugh R. Kirkpatrick, for
a share of the profits. Garland
claims there was a "secret profit"
in the resale of the bank stock
and that other heirs received
their share.
The suit charged that bank
stock from Garland's father's
estate was sold to Kirkpatrick
at $300 a share, to keep it in
local hands. The father, Sam
uel M. Garland, had asked in
his will that the stock stay in
local control. The younger Gar
land and Kirkpatrick were ex
ecutors. The suit said that three years
later the stock was resold to
Transamerica Corp., which now
controls the bank, for $1,300 a
share. Kirkpatrick was then
chairman of the Lebanon bank
directors.
Garland said his sisters re
ceived a settlement from the re
sale profit but that he did not.
Man Attempts
Jump Off Dam
Las Vegas, Nev., Jan. 31 (U.PJ
Jake P. Jaramillo, 30, Oxnard,
Calif., was held in protective
custody after he tried to jump
700 feet to certain death from
the top of Hoover Dam, the
highest dam in the world.
He was lodged in the Clark
County jail after six park serv
ice rangers wrestled with him
in a successful effort to prevent
Jaramillo from leaping off the
top of the dam onto a concrete
ramp 700 feet below on which
the Hoover dam power genera
tors are located.
During the struggle one rang
er narrowly missed being shoved
off the top of the dam. Rangers
found it necessary to put Jara
millo in leg irons to subdue
him.
Sheriff's Captain L. L. Payton
said Jaramillo was a parolee
from New Mexico, having served
a term on a murder charge.
struction job will be finished.
By their figures, Kassel's
225,000 population had 65,146
family living units with 190,300
rooms before it was attacked
They say the war destroyed 59
752 units with 173,173 rooms.
By "destroyed" they mean unin
habitable.
FOR
Insured Sayings
SEE
Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, January 31, 1 950 3
First
Federal
(rVwiMtf First
Current Dividend 2V2
st Federal Savings
and Loan Ass'n.
142 South Liberty
1
Of happy patrons
We have a host
Who thank us for
Their breakfast toast.
NEW SHIPMENT!
150 Pairs Smart Colorful
ELFIES
ff
Impish, bewitching Elfics are the hit of the season now
you can 'get them for only $2.99. Made of long-wearing
suede-like fabric and styled for comfortable fit. Now avail
able in exciting black, bi,wn, green, red and shades!
SHOES SECOND FLOOR
If nor Ilk liberty
Iff north liberty
FEBRUARY
DOUBLE
DOUBLE STAMPS
Floor Sample
Refrigerators
$20 REDUCTION
Lost year models
Fully guaranteed
Various prices and
styles
DOUBLE STAMPS
Ladies' B'ouses
2.99
Values to $5.95
White and colored
Broken sizes
DOUBLE STAMPS
Floor Sample
Washers
Reduced
Famous name
Fully guaranteed
Limited quantity
DOUBLE STAMPS
Cartridge Case
Purses
29c
A style hit
All leather
Strap fastener
DOUBLE STAMPS
Electric Ranges
Reduced
( Floor samples
Last year models
Famous name
DOUBLE STAMPS
Ladies' Cashmere
Sweaters
4.99
Oatmeal color only
Sizes 34 to 40
irregulars
Limited quantity
DOUBLE STAMPS
Boys' All-Wool
Jackets
4.99
$9.95 values
Heavyweight
Boys sizes
DOUBLE STAMPS
Popular "Elfies"
2.99
0 New shipment
Brown, green, red,
black
Limited quantity
WEDNESDAY
ROBERTS BROS. FEBRUARY
GREEN STAMP WEDNESDAY
WHIT
FEA"
E SALE
RES
TU
Thousands of crisp, snowy white sheets and cases for this final
White Sale event!
Cannon Crest Muslin Sheets, seconds, 81x108 $1.89
Cannon Colored Muslin Sheets, seconds, 81x108 $2.29
Pequot Quality Muslin Sheets, firsts, 81x108 $2.69
Colored Towel Sets, bath, hand, cloth 69
White Sheet Blankets, seconds, 72x90 $1.89
White Muslin Pillow Cases, 42x36 . 39
ROBERTS BROS. FEBRUARY
GREEN STAMP WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL CLEARANCE
MISSES' AND WOMEN'S
DRESSES
Values
to
14.95
$99
EACH
A double value sensation Final clearance of all fall dresses One lot of 60
at this low $4.99 price. Wools, crepes, satins, rayons. A record value as
sortment Come early for this sale item.
FINAL CLEARANCE LADIES' COATS
A limited group of All Wool winter Coats
for just
$10
00
ROBERTS BROS. FEBRUARY
GREEN STAMP WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL PURCHASE
NYLON KNIT .
LINGERIE
ktok off
A chance to have that fine nylon lingerie you've always wanted made by a
famous manufacturer drastically reduced because of microscopic flaws.
$12.95 Nylon Nighties at just $6.99
$6.95 Nylon Nighties at just $3.99
$4.95 Bias Cut Slips at just $2.99
$4.95 Lace Trim Half Slips at just $2.99
$1.65 Nylon Tailored Panties at just 99 C
$2.50 Nylon Lace Trim Panties at u$t $1 .59
'8
DOUBLE STAMPS
Pillow Tubing
39c
Yd.
Sturdy type 128
Springnight seconds
42 inch width limit 5
DOUBLE STAMPS
Paper Draperies
50c Pj
Famous name
Regular 98c
4 Color combinations
DOUBLE STAMPS
Ladies1 Slips
1.00
Values to $2.95
Tailored and trimmed
Broken sizes
DOUBLE STAMPS
Ladies' Handbags
1.00
Plastics and patent
Various styles
Assorted colon
DOUBLE STAMPS
Men's Neckties
35c
Values to $1.50
Various colors
Famous nam
DOUBLE STAMPS
Men's Work Sox
25c
Heavy duty
Grey, slate, random
Short and long styles
DOUBLE STAMPS
Fabric Remnants
Vl PRICE
Wools, rayons, cottons
Assorted lengths .
Large assortment
DOUBLE STAMPS
Shower Curtain
Sets
3.95
Curtain and drapes
Lovely color combina
tions Spring designs
n
r