Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 14, 1950, Page 10, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    10 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, February 14, 1950
-' o ra fe-
Last Ride Convicted child murderer Fred Stroblc waves
goodbye as he leaves for a Los Angeles railroad station and
probably the longest and last train ride of his life. His des
tination is the gas chamber at San Qucntin prison where,
if the state supreme court upholds his sentence, he will be
executed for the sex slaying of six-year-old Linda Joyce
Glucot. Strobel's fellow prisoner, Alwyn Luse (left), forger,
sentenced to a one-to-four-year-term, covers his face from
the battery of flashbulbs. (Acme Telephoto)
Life Insurance Spokesmen Rap
Tax on Savings for Spenders
Washineton. Feb. 14 U. Life Insurance spokesmen said to-
Hav that the administration's proposal to tax their business is
an attempt to "soak the savers for the benefit of the spenders."
However, the spokesman endorsed an extension into 1950 of
. "sinn-irnn" hill levying $90,000,000 in taxes on insurance
companies for the 1947-49 per-'
lod. The extension would bring
in an estimated $50,000,000 ad
ditional. The bill has passed the house
and is awaiting senate action.
Claris Adams, president of the
Ohio State Life Insurance Co.,
Columbus, O., said the measure
uses what the companies consid
er a proper "industrywide" ap
proach to taxing life insurance.
Adams, appearing before the
house ways and means commit
tee, described the administra
tion's tax proposals as "an cf
for"; to shift the emphasis from
taxing French pcrfumei to tax
ing savings."
The stopgap bill is based on
net investment income over and
above that required -for re
serves. It is designed to replace
a 1941 formula under which the
companies failed to pay any
taxes for the three-year 1947-49
period because of a drop in their
investment return.
Horace R. Bassford, vice pres
ident and chief actuary of Met
ropolitan Life Insurance Co.
New York, described the admin
istration's suggestions as "exact
ly as if you tried to tax deposits
paid in through a bank win
dow."
Head hunting is said to have
been practiced in the British
Isles up to the end of the Middle
Ages.
Reports Truman
Talks of Running
Washington, Te. 14 (U.PJ One
of President Truman's chief
California supporters said after
a White House conference Mon
day that the chief executive is
talking about running for re
election in 1952.
The President chatted briefly
with George Luckey of Los An
geles, vice chairman of the Cali
fornia democratic central com
mittee.
Luckey told newsmen that he
nformed the President that he
wanted him to run again.
"What did he say?" reporters
asked.
'He said maybe so," Luckey
answered. "He said that if we
have the same team together
again maybe we could do something."
Luckey said that by "team,"
the President referred to the peo
ple who supported him in his
successful 1948 bid for the presidency.
"He is my boy," the California
politician said of the President.
I m all for him.
Luckey has been in Washing
ton for several days conferring
with various officials and will
remain here for the Jefferson-
Jackson day dinner Thursday.
Canby Hop Growers
Make New Contracts
Aurora The 1950 crops of six
Canby area hop growers were
contracted to Williams & Hart,
Salem brokers, at prices rang
ing from 60 to 65 cents, in docu
ments filed at the Clackamas
county court house during the
week.
Frank and John Hein contract
ed to sell 8000 pounds of fuggles
at 60 cents a pound. F. O. and
Mabel Kraxbcrger contracted
sale of 10,000 pounds of cluster
hops at 65c cents.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Kalb
contracted 8000 pounds of fug
gles at 60 cents.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Landsem
of the Monitor district contract
ed 14,000 pounds of clusters at
66 cents a pound.
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Lemons
contracted to sell 4000 pounds
of clusters at 62 and 8000 pounds
of fuggles at 62 cents.
John Nordhausen contracted
11,000 pounds of cluster hops at
65 cents a pound.
ROSSELLINI'S LAWYER SAYS:
Ingrid Bergman's Son Will
Become Legitimate in All Ways
By NORMAN MONTELLIER
Rome, Italy, Feb. 14 (U.R) Ingrid Bergman's son may be legal
ly motherless for several weeks, but eventually he "will be
come legitimate in every way," Roberto Rossellini's lawyer
said today.
The lawyer, Gino Sotis, explained some of the legal quirks
in the birth of the child 12 days-
ago to Miss Bergman and Ros-
sellini while she still was the
legal wife of Dr. Peter Lind-
strom of Hollywood.
Sotis said it would be some
weeks before Miss Bergman
could register the Mexican di
vorce granted to her last week.
Until that is done, he said, she
cannot go on record legally as
the mother of the child.
In the meantime, the boy is
listed in the Italian birth rec
ords as Enalo Roberto Giusto
Giuseppe Rossellini," "the son of
Roberto Rossellini." The moth
er's name is not mentioned.
The registration was made
Sunday at the last possible moment.
"The child has been declared
the proper son of Rossellini, re
serving to Miss Bergman the ne
cessity of making a similar de
claration as soon as her Mexican
divorce has been registered in
Italy and Sweden," Sotis said.
"The process of registration will
last some weeks.
"As soon as Miss Bergman's
divorce is registered with Swed
ish and Italian authorities, she
will make the formal declaration
of recognition of her son.
"With the eventual marriage
of the couple, the child will be
come legitimate in every way."
The birth registration was
made just before the deadline
by an attorney representing Ros
sellini, who later held a press
conference in his suite at the
Excelsior hotel to explain what
had happened.
Rossellini was accompanied by
four attorneys and spokesmen,
one of whom cited article 74 of
the Italian civil code of 1939 for
the unusual procedure of listing
the father instead of the mother
in the birtth records.
The spokesman said the law
states that a certification of birth
may be made by an "interested
parent" and that the other par
ent may be named later.
The child was listed as the son
of Rossellini to prevent Miss
Bergman's former husband, from
whom she was divorced by a
mail order Mexican decree last
week, from making any ethni
cal claim to the child. The baby
was born before Miss Bergman
received her divorce from Dr.
Peter Lindstrom of Hollywood
It was necessary to register
the baby's birth Sunday because
it was the 10th day after the
birth. Registration in Italy must
be made 10 days after birth
unless the registrar's office is
closed that day, when it must
be made the day following.
Rossellini said the baby would
be baptized "within the next few
days, probably in a small chapel"
in the Villa Margherita hospital
where Miss Bergman and the
baby are slaying.
Young Immigrant Boy
Killed Playing in Barn
Colton, Wash., Feb. 14 (U.R)
A young Polish immigrant boy
was killed in a barn here Sun
day night while playing with
another boy, the sheriff's office
reported.
The sheriff said Jan Bech,
about 16, was shot through the
breast with a .22 calibre pistol
and died almost instantly.
Prosecutor Lawrence Hick
man reported that the boy was
playing with Don Drussell, 17,
when the gun went off.
"We were playing around in
the barn," young Drussell said.
"I don't know what happened.
All of a sudden the gun went
off and shot Jan."
Hickman said Jan and his fam
ily had come over from Europe
last September and the boy's
father had been working on the
Drussell farm.
StJoseph
IS ASPIRIN AT ITS BEST
Now at a New Lower Price !
NO CLUTCH-PUSHING, NO GEAR-SHIFTING, EVER
NO JERKING OR "CLUNKING"
NO GAS-WASTING SLIPPAGE AT CRUISING SPEEDS
NO RISKY DOWN-SHIFTS ON SLIPPERY ROADS
NO OVERHEATING ON LONG HILLS
NO LAG, WAITING FOR GEARS TO SHIFT
NO CLASHING INSTANT CHANGE FROM FORWARD TO
REVERSE (YES, YOU CAN ROCK 11 IN SNOW)
u.v miiju-i uyjiuiyiiau"!
(W in-we mnf iiou to drVe. if !
Grid Star's Tackle
Foils Attack on Girl
St. Louis, Feb. 14 U.R) James
Greig, 23-year-old Washington
university football player, had
earned another "letter" today
an invisible C for Courage.
Greig tackled and captured
the masked gunman who was at
tempting to attack his girl friend.
Involved in the incident were
Greig, his "steady" girl friend,
former Washington university
Homecoming queen, Charlotte
Obst, 19; and Kendall L. Morris,
28-year-old former convict.
Greie dodged bullets in
the ex-convict, tie him with his
own belt, shove him intn ti,
trunk of Greig's car and deliver
mm to ponce.
EnM
oid n
Sunny Brook
f BRAND
the whiskey that's
CAeerfit as Cs Aame "
I BRAND I
1 S I
Pint
$060
J Qt.
f
You've read about this fine whiskey
many times . . . but only after you've
tasted' Old Sunny Brook will you
understand why so many men prefer
this Kentucky whiskey above all others.
KENTUCKY WHISKEY A BLEND
86 PROOF 65 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORP, N. Y.
' j tOOK FOR THIS WATCHMAN
ON EVERY BOTTLE '
Switch to the new drive sensation designed and built by Packard!
'950 Packard Eioin Diluxe, US-HP Touring SttUm
AM THE MAS THO OWNS ONE
Penney's SCOOP:
IN
YOUR CHOICE OF:
RAYON SHEEN GABARDINE
OR ALL-WOOL SUEDE FABRICS,
BOTH STYLES FULLY RAYON LINED
SCOOP: In New Low, Low Price!
SCOOP: In New Fashion Right
Short Coat Styles!
SCOOP: In New Spring Coat Fab
rics and Colors!
A 26 inches long (the experts say that will
be the 1 950 Short Coat length) and
new brilljant rayon sheen gabardine.
Red, green, and pastels. 10 to 18.
B Warm, soft, 100 wool suede in all
the newest Spring shades. Roomy patch
pockets, fully lined, one-button front.
All sizes.
PENNEY'S SECOND FLOOR
.IJllSSBll
STATE MOTORS, INC.
340 N. High St.
Salem, Oregon