Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 11, 1950, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore.,
Thomas Talks
To Farm Union
"Since political and economic
democracy is inseperable we
must have an economy charac
terized by the maximum of prop
erty owners," declared Lyle
Thomas, secretary for the State
Farmers Union as he gave the
principal address Saturday morn
ing during the quarterly con
ference of the Maron county
unit of the organization.
Quoting from the Federalist,
a publication of early United
States history, Thomas said
"power over a man'? support is
power over his will " "Which
means," continued Thomas, "we
must avoid the evils of Indus
trialism in which a ft-w control
the livelihood of the many."
Much of the forenoon session
held in the Farmers Union hall
on North Commercial street, was
devoted to various reports. Gus
Schlicker, of the Bethel local
and president of the county unit,
presided. He was assisted by
Marie Cornwell, secretary of the
Woodburn local.
Speeches Flow
On Lincoln Day
Hy the A&soclated Press)
Republicans around the na
tion this week-end are celebrat
ing the 141st birthday of Abra
ham Lincoln, the 16th president
of the United States.
Governor Thomas E. Dew
ey of New York, twice an un
successful standard bearer of
the Grand Old Party, steps in
to the background at the nation
al republican club's dinner in
New York City Monday night.
Dewey will introduce Gover
nor Alfred E. Driscoll of New
Jersey, featured speaker at the
club's annual dinner at the Wal
dorf Astoria hotel.
Harold E. Stassen, University
of Pennsylvania president who
failed in the race for presiden
tial nomination in 1948, ad
dresses the Illinois young repub
licans annual dinner tonight.
Pilgrimages to Lincoln's tomb
in Springfield, 111., will be made
tomorrow by veterans organiza
tions and young republicans.
On Monday in Springfield, coun
ty bar association members will
march to Lincoln's tomb from
the courthouse where the Great
Emancipator practiced law.
Indonesia Next
In Line for Aid
Washington, Feb. 11 Wwith
Indonesia set for a new $100,
000,000 U. S. credit, Indochina
was chalked up today as the next
communist - threatened Asiatic
region in line for .American dol
lar help.
Diplomatic authorities look
for the new Vietnam regime
headed by former Emperor Bao
Dai to be dealt a share soon of
the $75,000,000 far eastern arms
fund which President Truman
has at his disposal.
Vietnam and the two smaller
French-sponsored states of Cam
bodia and Laos in Indochina
also are eligible for United
States government loans such as
the big credit which the export
Import bank yesterday author-
ized for Indonesia.
Herbert Gaston, bank chair-
, man, said Vietnam's needs will
"certainly" be investigated if an
Inquiry is made.
Such a loan, which may be
be used only for economic pur
poses, might require months to
negotiate. Meantime Indochina
is under direct pressure both
from the advancing Chinese
communists on its northern
frontier and by the internal re
bellion of Ho Shi-Minn, Moscow
trained revolutionary.
January Traffic Toll
In Oregon Totals 18
. The state traffic safety divl
sion rcnorted toriav that in uni
sons lost their lives in Oregon
iratuc accidents in January.
Officials said heavy storms and
hazardous road conditions which
made motorists doubly careful
were primarily responsible for a
sharp decline In fnl.nlif it tmm
the December toll of 50, high for
1849. ,
Similar weather a year ago
jihu an even greater effect, they
said, with a death toll of 13 in
January and 11 in February.
STARTS TOMORROW
BING and WALT
team up, and
Bine
.-.Color byTtCHNICOlOt
Saturday, February 11, 1950
Bea Wallace
Held at Ukiah
Mrs. Hazel Beatrice Wallace,
51, better known as "Bea" Wal
lace, of Silverton, is under ar
rest at Ukiah, Calif, and will be
given a hearing March 8 on a
charge of hit and run driving
She was arrested after Bon
Cortier, 57, of Medford, was
critically injured in a highway
accident Friday, according to an
Associated Press dispatch.
Sheriff B. G. Broaddus said
that her automobile, an old mo
del 12-cylinder Lincoln, side
swiped the Cortier automobile
which went over a 70-foot em
bankment and burned near Lay-
tonville. Cortier is hospitalized
at Willits.
Mrs. Wallace is quoted by
Highway Patrol Officer Floyd
Mullen, who made the arrest,
that she stopped on the high
way after the accident, but not
seeing the other car, drove away.
She told officers that she was
on her way to find police when
she was arrested. Mrs. Wallace
is being held in a hospital pend
ing arrival of a bond from her
insurance company in San Fran
cisco, the dispatch states.
Mrs. Wallace lived on Hobart
road at Silverton where she and
her husband, who died two years
ago, operated a rabbitry and also
a restaurant at First and Oak
streets in Silverton. Recently
she had been employed In a res
taurant at Salem. The couple
lived at Silverton the last ten
years.
Mrs. Wallace left around
Than k s g i v i n g for Petaluma,
Calif, to visit a daughter. Mrs.
Virginia Brower, intending to
remain two weeks but extended
her visit because of her daugh
ter's illness. She had written
friends she was returning to
Oregon and was expected home
this week-end.
Regional Plan
For Pychopalhs
Mental hospital superintend
ents, prison wardens and heads
of similar institutions in the 11
western slates have gone on rec
ord as favoring establishment of
a regional institution for psy-
copaths and mentally defective
delinquents. .
Word to that effect was
brought to Governor Douglas
McKay Saturday by Dr. Irvin
B. Hill, superintendent of the
stale's Fnirview Home at Salem.
He said that favorable action
on a resolution urging creation
of such a facility was taken re
cently by the Western Commit
tee on Institutional Care at a
meeting at Long Beach, Calif.
The committee is a subsidiary of
the National Governors confer
ence.
Estimates compiled at Long
Beach showed that at least 1000
of these persons in the west need
institutional handling.
It was felt that the institu
tion should be centrally located
so as to give the best possible
service to the interested states
and that it should be built to ac
commodate 1500 inmates," Dr.
Hill told the governor.
He added that the concensus
of the meeting was that the
building should be erected on an
extensive plot of fertile land to
give the inmates an opportuni
ty to work outdoors and grow
much of their own food. Those
attending the meeting agreed to
work on legislation that might
lead to approval of the facility
Dr. Hill is a member of . the
committee which the board of
control named recently to study
Oregon's psycopathic problem
with the idea of preparing re
commendations for the 1951 leg
islature.
11 Law Students
Placed on Dean's List
Eleven men have received the
signal honor of election to the
full semester "Dean's list" by
faculty members of the College
of Law at Willamette universi
ty, Dean Seward P. Reese an
nounces. Qualifications stipulate that
men must be in the upper ten
percent of their class. Those se
lectcd were: Roger Todd, Tom
Churchill and Berkeley Lent of
Salem, from third year class;
Dale Pierson, LaGrande; James
Beriingficld and Joe Larkin, Sa
lem, second year law students
Charles Cloudy, Ketchikan,
Alaska; Tom Enright Gait, Cal.;
Ralf Erlandson, Florence; Tom
Anderson, Silverton and Ervin
llogan, Bend, first year class.
ENDS TODAY!
"EVERYBODY DOES IT"
"THIEVES HIGHWAY"
2 IliK Hits Cont. 1:45
SIAI
MARGARET O'BRIEN HERBERT MAnSHAL
r-S"""' I miKKaxmnm
II III) iujjpyMMMMiMMMMMMWMMW.WW,lM
if Vw vl
w law rt
Foster Mother Wins Child Lora Lee Michel, 9-year-old
film actress, kisses her foster mother, Mrs. Lorraine Michel,
55, after a Los Angeles juvenile court judge ruled that Mrs.
Michel and her husband, A. J. Michel (left), had legally
adopted the talented youngster in 1945. The ruling followed
a tearful courtroom scene in which her natural mother, Mrs.
Lena Wilson Brunson, 35, of Nederland, Tex., sought to get
her child back. (AP Wirephoto.)
June 22-24 Set
For Cherryland
June 22-24 were the dates ten
tatively set for the 1950 Cherry
land Festival, at a meeting of
the association members Friday
night.
Preliminary plans made at
the meeting included the selec
tion and coronation of the
Cherryland queen, the annual
parade, carnival attractions and
merchant participation in the
festival.
Mandatory of the annual af
fair this year for the male resi
dents of this area will be whis
kers. Planned as other features
are a big-name Hollywood show
and street dances at Marion
square.
Efforts to have the festival
underwritten by Salem mer
chants will begin immediately,
according to the chairman of the
association Sidney L Stevens. A
finance committee will be ap
pointed at the next meeting of
the group February 17 and at
the same time the nominating
committee will present names
for association officers for the
coming year.
Engineers fo
Meet Febr'y 24
Mid-Willamette valley section
of the Professional F-ngineers is
to open its 1950 sessions with a
meeting in Salem the night of
February 24.
The meeting at which R. H
Baldock, Oregon state highway
engineer will be the speaker.
will be held at the Senator ho
tel at 6:30 o'clock.
Baldock, past president of the
American Association of the
State Highway Officials and 1950
member of the executive com
mittee of the National Highway
Research board, is to discuss
Advance Thinking on the Fu
lure Highways."
The discussion will be taken
from his paper presented at the
second annual Institute of Street
and Highways Problems at the
University of California Institute
of Transportation and Traffic
Engineering in January.
Presented in the paper are
factors necessary for economic
development of a sound high
way system. These include geo
metric design, obsolescence, traf
fic demand and costs. A solution
of these problems is also sug
gested.
Keizer The Keizer Ladies'
Sewing club met at the home of
Mrs. Onas Olson for a day of
quilting and a no-host dinner
at noon.
Those attending were Mrs. J.
V Gardner, Mrs. W. E. Sonage,
Mrs Ben Claggett, Mrs. Otto
Yunker, Mrs. Ira Turner, Mrs.
Nick LeRud, Miss Ruth Rullf
son, Mrs. Sam Richards, Mrs.
I heotr
Bllvertea
OreioB
Last Time Tonite
G! SHEET J
llim POWELt
Mark STEVENS
Betsy DRAKE
Snikpoh Play
Is Smash Hit
By DAVID BLACKNER
Presented before a capacity
crowd of over 1,000, the Salem
high school Snikpoh Dramatic
club put on the play "Years
Ago" Friday night at the Salem
high school auditorium, direct
ed by Margaret Burroughs, club
adviser.
From the opening of the cur
tains the play was a sm&jh hit
and the student actors received
praise for their spectacular act
ing ability.
The theme of the play reached
into the hearts of everyone at
tending as the scene of the early
davs was the setting and the
cast was called back for sev
eral curtain calls following the
play.
Susan Perry, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Perry, was
presented a bouquet of red roses
by the members of Stage Craft
flub for her fine performance
in the leading role of Ruth
Gordon Jones.
Ruth Jones had an opportun
ity to go on the stage in New
York before finishing her high
school education, and her fa
ther, portrayed by Robert Chiv
ers, objected to her ideals. Chiv
ers played a stern typical role
of a father in the early days as
he cussed his family up and
down over the matter of a high
grocery bill and other things.
Other parts impor'ant in the
play were acted by Susan Steed,
the mother; Judi Wood, and Myr
tle demons, friends of Ruth;
Richard Geer, Don Davis, Bob
Doughton, Rilla Rogers.
A Snikpoh cat also received
applause from the audience as
the cast had to worry about put
ting it out every night before
going to bed.
Miss Lelia Johnson, business
manager for the production, re
ported the plhy a financial suc
cess. Snickpoh club plans to use
all proceeds in purchasing a new
stage set which will cost over
$700.
Gerald Lewis, and the hostess
Mrs. Olson.
The next meeting will be
February 16 at the home of
Miss Lois Keefer.
Cont. From 1 P.M.
NOW! TWO GREAT
TARZAN THRILLERS!
Johnny
Welssmuller
Johnny
Sheffield
Cheeta
TARZAN
TRIUMPHS'
And
TARZAN'S
DESERT
MYSTERY'
Ends TODAY! Cont. Shows
Randolph Scott
"CANADIAN PACIFIC"
Alan Ladd
"GREAT GATSBY"
TOMORROW!
Loretta Young
"COME TO THE STABLE"
William Evrthe
"SPECIAL AGENT"
Beal to Head .
High School
M. H. (Pat) Beal, superintend
ent of Jefferson schools for the
last 10 years, is the new super
intendent of the Marion County
high school three miles north of
Hubbard on the Boone road.
Donald Read, athletic coach at
Jefferson, will be the new coach
at Hubbard.
The school will have an en
rollment of around 200 pupils
from Hubbard, Donald, Aurora
and Broadacres when it opens in
the fall.
Beal is a member of the state
athletic board of control and a
past president of t h e Oregon
Athletic association and the Mar
ion county division of the Ore
gon Education association. He is
a graduate of the University of
Oregon.
Read has been coach at Jeffer
son for three years. He gradu
ated from Pacific university at
Forest Grove and received his
master's degree from the Uni
versity of Oregon.
Valentine Day
School Parties
A number of Salem schools
will conduct Valentine parties
next Tuesday, some of them in
volving parents of the students.
Senior high will hold a stu
dent body Valentine assembly at
9 o'clock Tuesday morning
while Parrish will conduct an
all school mixer at 3:40 p.m. A
ninth grade party will feature
Leslie's observance of the day.
Grade school parties will be
held during the afternoon by the
following schools: Hayesville,
Pringle, Salem Heights, Wash
ington, Highland, Swegle, Au
burn and Hayesville.
Other activities of the week
as listed by the school adminis
tration include: Installation of
West Salem student body offi
cers, 11:45 a.m. Monday; Girls
Letter club informal initiation
at Salem high, 7 p.m. Monday;
Mothers' club meeting at Middle
Grove, 2 p.m. Tuesday; Girls
League meeting, West Salem,
8:45 a.m. Thursday; assemblies
at McKinley at 9 a.m. and En
glewood, 1 p.m. Wednesday; Mo
ther's club meeting at Washing
ton, 1:30 p.m. Wednesday; as
semblies at Highland and Bush
at 1 p. m. Friday; Mothers' club
meeting at Auburn, 1:30 p.m.
Friday and Mothers' club silver
tea of McKinley school, on Fri
day. Green Bay Tip on
Lancelle Too Late
A tip from Green Bay, Wis.,
made Salem detectives chuckle
Saturday.
P. Roy Madden, lieutenant of
detectives in that midwestern
city, wrote Salem officers asking
them to be on the alert for How
ard B. Lancelle, wanted for pa
role violation and suspected of
cashing some $200 in worthless
checks in Green Bay.
The tip said that Lancelle
might be living with a Cook fam
uy in Salem.
Lancelle, along with Mr. and
Mrs. David R. Cook, was arrested
weeks ago on charges of burg
lary and forgery.
Silverton Hostesses for
Thursday evening's St. Monica's
Altar society were Mrs. Henry
Wellman, Mrs. Joseph Gander,
Mrs. Charles Sthamann and
Mrs. Ludvig Moe. "
At Victor Point School, Mary Linda Doerfler plays
the new Hamilton School Piano from Stone's, and
(left to right standing) Judy Breckenridge and Bar
bara June Turner practice a program number.
Stone's have pianos for every purpose. New pianos
from $395.00, Rentals also for beginners.
stone n
'The Valley's Finest Piano Store"
1540 Fairground
f4
Held C. Aldon Johnson,
22, of Idaho Falls, Idaho
(top), and Stanley E. Abbott,
23, of Lehi, Utah (bottom),
missionaries for the Latter
Day Saints (Mormon church),
are reported in custody of of
ficials in Czechoslovakia. Mor
mon officials have expressed
confidence they will be re
leased soon. (AP Wirephoto.)
Floods Menace
Tennesseans
(Br the Auoclated Press)
There was a fresh batch of
cold and wet weather over wide
areas of the country today and
floods continued to menace areas
in middle Tennessee.
Two Negro women drowned
today in the slowly receding
floodwaters of the Cumberland
river at Nashville. Some 800
persons have fled their homes in
the lowland areas of middle
Tennessee. The river crested at
Nashville last night, 8.6 feet
above flood stage, and rising.
Wintry weather returned to
the northern great plains, the
upper Mississippi valley and
northern New England. Tem
peratures dropped to below
zero in parts of the Dakotas,
Minnesota and Maine. Some
lows included -16 at Pembina,
N. D.; -9 at Alexandria, Minn.,
and -1 at Caribou, Me.
Outside the cold belts, tem
peratures generally were above
seasonal levels, but skies were
not clear. Snow fell in the north
ern great lakes region, in the
central and northern Rockies
and in the interior sections of
the Pacific northwest.
There were several rainy
spots. Rain fell in the far south
west; near the west gulf coast;
the middle Atlantic slates and
along the Pacific northwest
coast. There was rain or snow In
southern New England.
Golden Prairie, Sask., Feb. 11
(U.PJ Prairie cattle raisers com
plained today that a shortage
of bird food was hurting their
herds. The farmers said hunger
driven magpies were attacking
their cows.
'ano
R ' ;"fl 1
I
Road - Salem
Public Service
Forum Planned
Administrative heads of sev
eral state departments announce
plans for forum organizations
for the betterment of state ad
ministration. A meeting for or
ganization has been called for
7:30 p.m. next Thursday in Room
309 at the State House.
Primarily the membership will
be administrative supervisors. It
will be known as the Public
Service forum, and mutual prob
lems among the departments will
be studied.
The membership may also in
elude persons outside of the state
service.
Secured as the main speaker
for the meeting Thursday night
is Prof. Eldon L. Johnson, dean
of the College of Liberal Arts
at the University of Oregon, and
at one time management an
alyist for the graduate school of
the department of agriculture in
Washington. D. C.
On the organization commit
tee are Fred Gast, state indus
trial accident commission; A,
Freeman Holmer, Willamette
university; Gene Huntley, high
way department; John Horner.
Fairview home; and Warne
Nunn, civil service commission.
9 Chinese Ships
Seized in Japan
Tokyo, Feb. 11 U.R)The Unit
ed State government today seiz
ed nine Chinese Nationalist
ships, ostensibly because the
Chinese defaulted on their
payments.
However, observers said the
move was obviously aimed
against the Chinese communists
who have laid claim to the ships.
The seizure appeared to be
aimed at keeping the vessels,
which would be potentially val
uable in a communist invasion of
Formosa, out of the hands of the
Chinese communist government.
Today's announcement from
Gen. Douglas MacArthur's head
quarters failed to mention the
communists, however. It stated
merely that eight Chinese Liber
ty ships and one Victory ship had
been seized in Japanese ports on
orders of a newly-formed admir
alty court.
It was considered significant,
however, that the seizure came
less than a week after the U. S.
joint chiefs of staff completed
their tour of U. S. Far East bases,
including lengthy conferences
with MacArthur.
J Today at Your
Warner Theatres! 1
Van Johnson
John Hodiak
Ricardo Montalban
George Murphy
In .
"BATTLE
GROUND"
' June Haver
Mark Stevens
In
"Oh. You
Beautiful Doll"
and
George Raft In
"OUTPOST
JN MOROCCO"
HELD OVER!
PH. 3-3467 MATINEE DAILY FROM 1 P.M.
ACCLAIMED BY ALL! 1
WINNER OF MANY AWARDS
AND NOMINATED FOR THE
ACADEMY AWARDS!
Scio Ceremony ,
Set for Monday
Scio, Feb. 11 Ground-breaking
ceremonies for the new
high school will be held at Hosch
field Monday afternoon with all
business houses to close their
doors at 2:30 o'clock for half an
hour. Albert Wagner, high
school principal, will be master
of ceremonies.
The first spadeful of earth will
be turned by Dr. J. F. Hosch,
former member of the legisla
ture, who donated the land up
on which the school will be
erected. The high school band
will play and in event of rainy
weather the program will be
held at the grandstand.
The program is being spon
sored by the PTA with Mrs. C.
J. Thurston president. Remarks
will be made by Mayor Carl
Warren; Kenneth Purdy, chair
man of the board of directors
four years ago when the ground
was donated; Marvin Long,
present chairman of the Union
high school h'.'ard; J. M. Ben
nett, Albany, Linn county sup
erintendent of schools; a repre
sentative from the office of
Freeman, Hayslip and Tuft,
Portland architects and Albert
Adams, of the Neuman contract
ing firm of Salem, who will su-
pcrintend the construction
the school.
In 1949, the American Bowl
ing Congress reports, there were
311,053 bowling teams compet
ing in 32,999 leagues, a new rec
ord.
Feel Like the Sandman
Slugged You?
That feeling will fade
and fast when you
start your working day
at NOHLGREN'S and
the new
Tree-Fresh Orange ,
Juice
Order a Tall Glass.
Then, have the spe
cial, extra-good
Ranch-Style Waffle
and, of course, Nohl
gren's Nut-brown Cof
fee. Make You Happy
All Day
tad Opon At
PuSttec Mm Wmm
All THE KING'S MOT
BRODERICK
CRAWFORD
Ml RS1AND Mi KSl
FUN CO-HIT!
Robert Young
Barbara Hale
"AND BABY MAKES THREE"
1