2 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Monday, March 6, 1950 Shipkov Pleads Guilty as Spy London, March 6 W) Five men went on trial In Sofia to day on charges of spying for the United States in Bulgaria A Tass report from Sofia heard by the Soviet Monitor Identified one of the defendants as Michael Shipkov. Shipkov pleaded guilty to all charges on the indictment, the Tass report said, The American government on Saturday released a report on how Bulgarian police "extorted' a false confession of espionage and treason from Michael Ship kov, a former Bulgarian em ploye of the United States em bassy in Sofia. The U. S. state department announcement on Shipkov s or deal said he was subjected to 32-hours of uninterrupted ques tioning and harrassment before breaking down. The United States broke off diplomatic relations with the communist-led government of Bulgaria last month. The Tass r e p o r t identified Shipkov's co-defendants as Jiv ka Rindova, Stefan Kratunkov, Nikola Kanov and Vasil Mal- chev. The trial is being conduc ted in the Sofia district court, $50 Million (or Alaska Harbors Portland, Ore., March 6 (U.B Rivers and harbors improve ments in south-central Alaska in the vicinity of Cook inlet to cost about $50,000,000 have been recommended by the North Pa cific division office of the Corps of Engineers, Col. O. W. Walsh, division engineer, announced to day. Col. Walsh said a survey re port prepared by the Alaska dis trict engineer had been approv ed by the division office here, Walsh said recommended work included hydroelectric power de velopments estimated to cost $45,654,000, navigation improve merits totaling $4,400,000 and flood control work costing $46. 000. Also included in the rec ommendations were additional sums for annual maintenance, The survey report was part of a comprehensive investigation of the entire territory of Alaska by the Corps of Engineers. The sur very covers the area drain ing into the tidal waters of Cook inlet, an arm of the Gulf of Al aska. Anchorage Is the area's pop ulation center. Baby Thrusts Scissors Info Her Left Eye Earline Noble, 2 years old, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Noble, accidentally thrust the point of a pair of scisssors into her left eye Monday. She was taken to a doctor by first aid men. Her father is a member of the fire department. Two other painful accidents were reported Monday. Ivan Hunt, 28, suffered third degree burns of the left arm and hand in a small fire at the Walling Sand & Gravel company plant. The fire did little damage oth erwise. It was caused from an oil pre-heater. Don Zander, 30, employe of Consolidated Freight, dropped a heavy iron trap door on his right index finger and got a compound fracture. The door was in a sidewalk in front of the Quisen berry pharmacy at Commercial and Court where freight was be ing unloaded. Zander lives at 1399 Franklin. $15,000 Suit for Death of David King A $15,000 damage suit, brought about by the wife of a man who was killed in a traffic accident, was filed in Marion county circuit court Monday. Filing the complaint was Thelma King, whose husband, David King, died as a result of a car accident in October, 1949. The complaint states that Vic tor Bousquet, listed as defend ant in the ense, was driving the car in which King was killed. The complaint alleges that Bous quet was in a state of intoxica tion at the time of the accident, and that his negligence caused the death of his passenger. NOW PLAYING Opens 6:45 P.M. nnMumriMMM CO-FEATUKE Bidaulf Asks Confidence Vote Paris, March 6 W) A communist-led strike on Paris bus and subway lines today confus ed but failed to stop the gay city's normal life. In the national assembly, meanwhile, the government this morning shut off a 72-hour-old Red filibuster aimed at killing the anti-sabotage bill. The strikers were demanding cost of living bonus. The fill- busters had sought to further communist campaign against shipments of Atlantic pact arms and of military aid to French troops in Indochina. Downtown streets were clog ged with unusually heavy auto and bicycle traffic. The French army's military police turned out to help keep the traffic untan gled. With most Paris stores closed normally on Monday, the strike effect on business was minimiz ed. Government ministries man aged to get most of their em ployes to work by special trucks and buses manned by volunteers, At least five bus lines and two subway lines were operating on irregular schedules. Taxicabs were available. Paris and it suburbs have 130 bus lines and 14 subway lines, The only incident reported was a minor clash between strikers and strike opponents. Police promptly broke it up. In the national assembly Pre mier Georges Bidault ended the communist filibuster by demand ing a motion of confidence on the anti-sabotage bill. Since Friday afternoon communist deputies alternately had been talking their heads off and tangling in fist fights with colleagues. The premier s action closed the marathon session of the assem bly which will vote on the con fidence question at midnight (6 p.m. EST) Tuesday. Allies Reject Refugee Flood Goettingen, Germany, March 6 VP) The western allies kept a trainload of 108 Germans ex pelled from Communist Polish territory out of western Germ any today. The allied high commission has said it has information that Poland intends to dump 250,000 expellees in western Germany. The previous estimate was 125,- 000 but today officials doubled it. The western allies have vowed to prevent the forced exodus, ex cept for 25,000 expellees who have west German relatives who can help care for them. West German officials have informed the western allies they will be unable to cope with the expected flood of refugees. The allied authorities believe Communist Poland has two-fold objective: To complicate the west German economy, already burdened with 9,000,000 refug ees and expellees and 2,000,000 unemployed; to cut the ground from any future German claims on territory east of the Oder Ncisse line based on the argu ment that the population is large ly German. Today's train a collection of freight cars carrying men, wom en and children halted at Heil- ingstadt, three miles inside the Soviet zone border. Soviet zone authorities asked for authority to send it across into the British British officials refused. 4 Slot Machine Operators Pay Fines Enterprise, Ore., March 6 VP) Four slot machine operators, ar rested by the state after being licensed by the city, pleaded guil ty in justice court here today. They were fined $25 each. Their machines, seized in a raid Saturday, were held under lock in the sheriff's office. A fifth person also cited in the raid was granted 24 hours in which to enter a plea. She was Mrs. Irene Babic, operator of one of the cafes raided Satur day, Those fined were Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Cox, John E. Cox and Steed Trump, all of Enterprise. 162W N. Commercial You walking up over paint store I! I M. I n " I, ' m rV . At ) rJr-r J Vm If k ' K I ' --If J" I i! IJ 1 t 'tf.nii llllii Hf I 1 1 if gfcmMM Final Stage of Coplon Trial New York, March 6 VP) The defense pictured Valentin A. Gubitchev today, in a final ap peal for his acquittal on spy conspiracy charges, as a love inflamed married man on an illicit adventure with an un married girl." Abraham L. Pomerantz made the plea for the Russian engineer after lawyers for the girl, petite Judith Coplon, announced they would let the case go to the jury without summing up. The six men and six women jurors may start deliberations late today after final arguments by government lawyers and the charge by Federal Judge Sylves ter J. Ryan. Pomerantz scornfully describ ed the government's evidence gainst Gutitchev as "tripe" and begged the jurors not to be swayed by any cold war hysteria or dislike for the Russians. He said his client and Miss Coplon met secretly in New York because they were in love and not, as the government charges, because they were plotting to steal defense secrets for the Rus sians. The Coplon-Gubitchev case branded by Moscow as a frame up, described by the U. S. gov ernment, as daring, cold-blooded spying entered its final stages a year and two days af ter the defendants' arrest. Boy Scout Killed By Surf-Borne Log . Tillamook, Ore., March 6 (U.R) A Boy Scout was killed when crushed by a surf-borne log just below Cape Lookout, authorities said today. The dead scout, Jack Jackson, 15, Camas, Wash., was killed when the log rolled over him. Two companions were thrown clear when the breaker rolled in. They were Gordon Oachs and Donald Pearson, Camas. The three were members of Evergreen troop 312 and were on an outing to Camp Merri- weather for the week-end. Bankruptcy Threat Worse Than H Bomb New York, March 6 (U.B Gen. Dwlgnt D. Eisenhower says Americans should try to do more about preventing "national bankruptcy" instead of worry ing so much about the hydrogen bomb. "My counsel Is not to be too concerned about the H-bomb," the wartime commander of al lied forces in Europe said last night. "We can do something about the possibility of national bankruptcy," he said. Oh litre, today rery hippy main. Accounting mn rctdlnc my talk ing Uit Friday nit corning up to my place. He flxum 10 I'm not having pay Income man anything much. He my friend, he very nice man, I'm liking him very much, he aavlng me monry. Being very happy again I'm cooking you very fine Chlneae dinner. You coming up my place on Commercial St. Chinese Tea Oarden le name on Ign out front, imy name Yre Sing) I cooking best Chinese dish you ever taste. You come alone, alright; you bring loti lr lends, L right; you having big party low peoples, you let me know first I am getting big table In big room all ready for you. You having plenty fun, you see. I shaking hand of all your guest then everybody be my friend. X like everybody I fix everybody fine healthful Chinese food, make everybody very healthy. You try, see. 'Mood Music' for Coach Horses Chief Coachman Land plays a record for a rehearsal of Buckingham palace coach horses for King George's drive to open parliament. 2 Escape State Hospital One Of Them Murderer By DOUGLAS THOMAS State police concentrated a hunt in the Portland area Monday for two inmates from the Oregon' state hospital one a murderer Who walked away from the grounds in Salem Sunday. Hospital officials described the pair as harmless. Both of the men had been free to roam the grounds at the institution. They were identified as Ervin Enbysk, 29, who killed a taxi driver near Pendleton when he was 15, and Engene Harshberger, committed to the hospital from Portland in 1938. The search in Portland v, launched after.. Salem police found that a girl friend of En bysk had hired a taxi to take her to Portland. There was rumor to the effect that she had been accompanied by a man on the trip. Despite the description of the hospital classifying the men as harmless, police listed Enbysk as dangerous. He had hired cab driver in Pendleton to take him to Pilot Rock. On the trip, the 15-year-old shot the cabbie through the head twice with a .22 rifle. He robbed the driver of $5, but said that was not the motive for the shooting. No mo- Captain Van Ausdell Visiting in Salem Salem airman spending a few days here, while on an official trip to the northwest for the Air Force is Capt. Robert Van Ausdell, who is visiting with his mother, Mrs. P. D. Van Aus dell of 336 Oak street. Van Ausdell arrived in Salem Sunday night and will return to Washington, D. C, March 9. The captain, since August of 1949 has been stationed in Wash ington, D. C, and has had as his assignments, special air missions for the U. S. Air Force. Last No vember he made a trip thaH took him to Germany, Paris, Rome Athens and England. Van Ausdell, a former Capi tal Journal carrier boy, first entered the Air Force in 1939 and returned to inactive duty in 1D45. He served as a pilot for the airlines for three years and reported back for active duty with the Air Force in 1948, re entering that service to fly the airlift in Germany, where he remained for six months. . r PotiD, cfDUdDCe WA. . 8llYrtoa Mfcanw Oregoa NOW PLAYING (Ends Wednesday) thi ySSSI? WORLD f -A f GUI? PECK tive was established, but he was never brought to trial. Enbysk was committed to the eastern Oregon state hospital two months after the killing and later transferred to Salem. One report said he had been unable to finish the first grade. No police record existed for his companion in the Sunday escape Harshberger. Mat. Daily from 1 p.m. i NOW! EXCITING! MIEAHO mn, UNTtO Mmtt" THRILL CO-HIT! Opens 6:45 P.M. NOW! TWO NEW STAR-STUDDED HITS! THRILL CO-HIT! Jon Hall Frances Langford Dick Foran "DEPUTY MARSHAL" If NOW SHOWING! Jl Open 6:15 - Start 6:45 Wl 1 1 Joan Bennett I f 1 1 ' James Mason 1 1 II "Reckless Moment" If ill Humphrey Bogart I III Florence Marly Iff ill Alexander Knox Iff 111 "TOKYO JOE" III Now! Opens 6:45 P.M. PcKffT Cummins In Technicolor "Green Grass of Wyoming" Jon Hall "Vigilantes Return" $2 Billion Basin Plan Approved Washington, March 6 UP) Senator Magnuson (D., Wash.) reported today that the senate interior committee had approved authorization of the ?2 000,000, 000 comprehensive Columbia basin development plan. The committee also recom mended the inclusion of the ba sin plan in the omnibus rivers and harbors bill, which is due for senate consideration soon. Magnuson said the committee vote for inclusion with the om nibus bill was eight to four. The action came after the committee failed to reach agree ment on the Columbia river de velopment , program during a two-hour morning session, Chairman O'Mahoney (D., Wyo.) told reporters the com mittee is considering a motion by Senator Cordon (R., Ore.) to authorize a $412,000,000 pro gram proposed by the president, plus the $192,000,000 Mountain Home, Idaho, project, and to utilize revenues from a power project at Hells Canyon, Idaho, to help pay construction costs. A substitute motion by Sena tor Anderson (D N M.) would limit the Mountain Home project to power .features but establish a basin-wide account for all rev enues, with construction repay ments to be made from that fund. Queen Elizabeth In Gorgeous Gown London, March 6 VP) Queen Elizabeth made an impressive figure as she attended today's state opening of parliament. She wore a crinoline gown of white satin, embroidered with gold thread and pearls. At the right side of the skirt was a large embroidered, bow from which the embroidery spread across the skirt. Her gown glittered with di Regency $79.50 $5 Down Delivers Ambassador $59-50 O Century $69.50 Flex Back $69.50 SI amonds and platinum and her necklace and other jewels were of diamonds. The queen wore the order of the garter beneath her crimson, gold and ermine robe of state. Princess Elizabeth wore a gown of white satin, exquisitely embroidered with pale tur quoise blue paillettes. Douglas Yeater Files For State Senator State Representative Douglas Yeater Monday filed his candi dacy for state senator from Mar ion county. Yeater, who is a Sa- lem merchant, served in the house of representative for sev eral terms. He has been active in civic af fairs of Salem and during the late war participated in Liberty bond and Red Cross campaigns. Yeater is the second hnnca member to file for the senate, Frank Doerfler having filed last week. Rep. W. W. Chadwick is expected to file for the senate Thursday or Friday. Japs to Open Overseas Office in Seattle . Tokyo, Monday, March 6 VP) The Japanese government will open an overseas agency in Seat tle, William J. Sebold," chief of General MacArthur's diplomat ic section, said today. The Seattle office will be sim ilar to those previously an nounced for San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York and Hono lulu. These agencies will en- Betty Hut on V'ctor Mature In RED, HOT A BLUE and "BACKFIRE" with Gordon MacRae Virginia Mayo Ednwd O'Brien WOO d AMERICA'S CHAIRWASTERS bri,9 y- 10UUGE CHAIRS Wonderful selection of exciting new fabrics! Tapeitriet! Matelasies! Brocatelles! Friezes! Famous J. L. Chase construction handsomely finished hardwood frames woven steel web base! Decorative modern styles that add immeasur- aoiy to rne oeauty and comfort of your home! Chairs you'd expect to pay $100 for now specially Priced as low as $59.50 Made to Sell for $100 & More, But . . . Sale Priced For This Event from 5 Negroes Killed In Car Collision Pendleton, March 6 (P) Five Negroes were killed when their car hit head on with a United Truck Lines truck six and a half miles west of Pendleton ear-' ly today. The car pulled around anoth er truck to pass it and struck the westbound truck, driven by Elgie Farris, Boise, Ida., who was unhurt. The dead, all of Pendleton: Robert Scott, 45; Alphonso Knox, 38; and his wife, Mar garet Knox, about 30; Mary Louise Moution, 22; and Nell Todd, 24. Knox was thrown from the car and instantly killed. The other four perished in the ma chine as it burned following the impact. gage in trade promotion and perform functions pertaining to personal status and property of United States residents of Jap anese ancestry. M-G-M's BIG & MUSICAl lr by TECHNICOLOR. 4 II ' Journal Want Ads Pay DRY'S musical LtiyJi TECHNICOlORjlf&?fk sttltf txr 111 Now! $5950 lB3a7 YEESING (that's my name, sure) DAKRYlf.ZAflDCK-llENETKINS f &