Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, September 21, 1950, HOME EDITION, Image 2

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    2 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Thursday. Sept. 21, 1950
Barkley Gels
Bid to Salem
State Treasurer Walter J.
Pearson said today that he has
Invited Vice President A ben W.
Barkley to attend a democratic
party rally in Salem October 13.
Pearson, who is a democrat,
sent the following telegram to
Barkley:
"It has come to our attention
that you will be in our section
of the country In early October.
The democrats In Oregon have
made wonderful progress In the
last two years and while Oregon
Is still considered to be a repub
lican stronghold, we are all do
ing everything possible to turn
the tide.
"On Friday, October 13, at 8
p.m., there will be a democratic
rally held In the armory in Sa
lem, Ore., honoring our demo
cratic nominees for the legisla
ture, the governorship and state
wide candidates. We wish to ex
tend to you and to Mrs. Barkley
an invitation to be with us at
that time. It would be a very
great honor to have you as our
guests. If you can make this a
part of your itinerary please let
me know as soon as possible so
that we may make the proper
arrangements for your visit."
Reception for
Stanford Team
A call Is going out to all
alumni of Stanford university
living in this area to attend a
reception on October 6 for the
Stanford football squad.
Plans are that the reception
will be from 5:30 to 8:30 at the
Senator hotel.
The Stanford team will head
quarter in Salem for Its game
with Oregon State college Sat
urday. October 7. The team,
coaches and athletic officials will
arrive by United Air. Lines In
the afternoon of Friday, October
8, in time to work out on the
Salem high school gridiron as
now arranged.
The reception will follow and
the visitors, over SO In number,
will be in Salem overnight, leav
ing for Corvallls Saturday morn
ing. Whether they will return to
Salem to board a plane for the
return trip hasn't been decided.
inq of Nuts
Approved by AAA
Washington, Sept. 21 UR
The agriculture department to
day tentatively approved a pro
posal to withhold 25 per cent of
the Pacific northwest's walnut
crop and 7.5 per cent of its fil
bert crop from consumer mar
kets to bolster grower prices.
The move was proposed by in
dustry control boards which ad
minister federal marketing pro
grams for filberts produced in
Oregon and Washington and wal
nuts produced in California, Ore
gon and Washington. Final de
partment approval is not expect
ed for about two weeks.
Last year, 30 per cent of the
walnuts and 25 per cent of the
filberts were ordered withheld
from markets. The surplus was
diverted to export and oil mills.
ine government paid growers
subsidies to compensate them
partly for the lower prices these
outlets pay.
MobileBiooTUnif
Sets Woodburn Date
' Woodburn The Red Cross
hloodmoblle for residents of
Marlon county will be at the
Legion hall on Highway OPE at
Woodburn Monday, September
25, from 2 to 8 p.m. All resi
dents of Woodburn, Hubbard,
and Gervais are urged to give
blond if possible at this time as
it is so desperately needed to
save lives.
Thoscs who wish to make res
ervations may call Mrs. William
Nel.ion at Woodburn, Black 88
or Mrs. Eugene Stoller, Green
178 but reservations are not nec
essary and every one is urged to
come whether or not they have
a reservation.
NOW SHOWING OPEN :U
North Marlon Fair
Schedule of Events
Thursday, Sept. 21
8 p.m State champion Or
der of Eagles drill team,
National Guard and fire de
partm e n t demonstrations,
tank "sham battle" Set
tlemeier park.
Friday, 8ept. 22
10 a.m. Fair buildings open
to public.
8 p.m. Y o u n g Oregonian
vaudeville show Settle-
meier park.
Saturday, Sept. 21
10 a.m Fair buildings open
to public.
11:30 a.m. FFA tractor driv
ing contest Lincoln play
ground. 3 p.m. Kiddies parade
downtown Woodburn.
4:30 p.m. Needle-in-the-hay-stack
hunt Lincoln play
ground. 8 p.m. Horse show Al
Smith and his trained Ara
bian horse, drills by Silver
ton and Salem Saddle clubs
Settlemeier park.
989 Students
At Willamette
Enrollment at Willamette unl
versity is slightly below that of
last year, with 089 students re
gistered thus far for fall term,
Registrar Harold B. Jory said
today.
However, Jory pointed out
that more students may sign up
before registration officially
closes October 2.
A breakdown of registrations
shows that males outnumber the
females by 230 with 295 worn-
en and 525 men registered for
fall classes. Enrollment in the
college of liberal arts, largest
school on campus, includes
251 freshmen, 218 sophomores,
178 juniors and 140 seniors.
In the college of law, enroll
ment totals 103. Of that figure,
two students are women. There
are 41 first year students, 35 sec
ond year students and 27 third
year law students.
The college of music boasts a
registration of 67, with 18 fresh
men, 12 sophomores, 17 Juniors
and 16 seniors. Four special stu
dents are taking music courses.
Twenty graduate students are
on the campus this term as well
as 13 special students.
Huggins Heads State
Insurance Agents
Portland, Sept. 21 Of)
Charles H. Huggins, Salem, to
day was elected president of the
Oregon Association of insurance
agents. The group opened its
annual convention here.
Huggins has been state execu
tive commtitee chairman. He
heads an agency which operates
in Salem, Coos Bay, Myrtle
Point and Gold Beach.
Opening the two-day session.
the delegates were welcomed by
Portland s Mayor Dorothy Mc-
Cullough Lee. A headline
speaker was O. Shaw Johnson
Clarksdale, Miss., president of
the national association. He said
said a new type of war damage
coverage, federally backed, is
being formed. It will be similar
to that operated for World War
II.
Reject Ban on
Economic Aid
Washington, Sept. 21 (Pi The
house refused today to impose
an outright ban on economic aid
to nations carrying on military
trade relations with Russia or
her satellites.
Instead, it approved a provi
sion giving the national security
council power to halt aid to any
nation whose trade with Russia
is found to be "contrary to the
securtiy interests of the United
States."
The provision approved was
backed by President Truman's
forces as a substitute for a sen
ate-voted stiff prohibition
against U.S. aid to countries
which export to Russia "arms or
armaments or military material
or articles or commodities" that
are useful for military purposes.
The main difference between
the senate provision and the
house plan is that the latter
gives the security council, of
which the president is head, dis
cretion in determining when
economic aid should be halted.
The senate provision did not al
low this leeway.
The senate wrote its plan into
a $17,000,000,000 emergency de
fense appropriation bill and
President Truman flatly opposed
It.
The administration plan was
offered by Chairman Cannon
(D., Mo.) of the house appropri
ations committee. .
Most republicans favored a
less flexible plan.
Fir Lumber
Boom Spinning
Portland, Sept. 21 WV-The
lumber boom is spinning Doug
las fir mill production to a new
record, perhaps to as much as
10,500,000,000 board feet this
year.
H. V. Simpson, executive vice
president of the West Coast
Lumbermen's association, said
today output the first eight
months was 6,883,000,000 board
feet. This was done despite a
freight car shortage that cur
tailed shipments and shut down
some mills of the Pacific north
west, he reported.
Weekly production in August
averaged 241,839,000 feet, which
was 147.4 per cent of the 1945-
49 average. Orders averaged
222,384,000 and shipments 206,-
958,000.
The mills of Washington and
Oregon had a backlog of unfill
ed orders totaling 1,060,231,000
at the end of August, Simpson
reported. Gross stocks were 785,
533,000 feet at that time.
Earlier yesterday, Simpson
said the rail car shortage had cut
into production by 60,000,000
feet a week.
Clothing Given by
Missionary Group
Aurora Members of the Wo
men s Missionary Fellowship
met in Bethany Evangelical Free
church at Canby last week to
mend and pack a large quantity
of clothing which had been
donated for needy persons in
missionary fields In the Pacific
and in Africa. Mrs. Max Bent,
expressed the organization's ap
preciation of donations for shipment
A fellowship luncheon was
r m
, , I I) - f
J '1 J u - - u
Eft -i tiVfrl in A ittri -" 11 4 u mi), iitiNV-v&-?3
Zoo Family Group Two greater kudus stand with their
two-day old progeny at Chicago's Brookfield zoo. Director
Robert Bean calls them Africa's most beautiful antelopes.
John D. George
Now Lt. Colonel
Promoted to a lieutenant colo
nel in the U. S. army, effective
September 7, was a former Sa
lem man, John D. George, who
prior to World War II was a
deputy in the office of the city
engineer here.
George, now a regular army
man and until recently the army
instructor for Oregon National
Guard units in Eugene, October
2 is to report to Camp Stone
man for an overseas assignment.
The colonel, who has a ridge
in New Guinea named for him,
went to the Pacific with the 41st
division during the last war.
The ridge, which bears the name
of George ridge, was given that
name after the Oregon officer,
then a captain, with 82 men and
officers of his company A, 162nd
infantry regiment, 41st division,
held the ridge three nights
astride the Jap line of commu
nications.
George's outfit's fight against
great odds became one of the
famed exploits of the Salamaua
campaign and was credited with
helping force the withdrawal of
the Nips from all occupied posi
tions south of the ridge, George
was awreded the Silver Star
Medal.
Following World War II Col.
George became a regular army
man and served as an instructor
for National Guard units. After
being in the Silverton area as an
instructor, the colonel went to
the infanty school at Fort Ben
ning, Ga. Following this he was
assigned to the Eugene duty.
Altar Society Meet
Gervais The St. Rita Altar
society held its first meeting of
the season at the parish ball last
week with 20 members present.
At the refreshment hour Mrs.
John Messer, Mrs. George Rush
and Mrs. Frank Adelman, Sr.,
served.
LATE SPORTS
served at noon with Mrs. D. C.
Gorbett, president, opening the
afternoon prayer and mission
study meeting. Mrs. Harry Al-
kire led the devotional meeting.
Baseball
11 Navy Nurses
Killed in Crash
Waihinaton. Sept. 21 WV-The
9ft virtimi of the crash of a na
vy transport plane off the island
of Kwajalein in the Pacific
ocean Tuesday night included 11
navy nurses, three of them from
the Pacific northwest.
The victims also included a
man from Clallam Bay, Wash.,
and one from Portland.
The victims were listed by the
navy as including Lieut, (jg)
Mary Eleanor Liljegreen, 25, Se
attle. Lt. (jg) Jeanne Elizabeth
Clarke sister, Margaret Clark,
care F. L. Weber, Portland, Ore.;
brother, John Henry Clarke,
Portland.
Lt. (Jg) Alice Stella Giroux
father, Euclid Giroux, (2019
East Wright St.) Tacoma, Wash.
Lt. James Jacob Kllthau
wife. Mrs. Katherine Margaret
Kilthau, Portland, Ore.; mother
and father, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
George Kilthau, Portland.
Edward Albert Sauer. avia
tion electronics man, 3rd class
wife, Mrs. Violet Martha Sauer,
Scottsbluff. Neb.; mother, Mrs.
A. H. Scheel. (Box 687), caiiam
Bay, Wash.; father, Jake Sauer,
(General Delivery) weiser, iua.
The Isle of Man is equidistant
from England, bcotiana, ana
Ireland. .
NATIONAL
Pittsburgh ...300 104 000 8 13 3
Brooklyn 010 045 OOx 10 12 5
Werle. Queen (5). Dickson 6i,
and McCdllounh and Mueller (6)
Romano. Bankhead (1), Branca
(5). Pallca (6) and Campanella
St. Louis 000 000 0000 2 1
Boston 211 000 10X 5 10 0
Stalcy. Brazle (3), and Rice;
Soahtt and Crandall.
Cincinnati 002 500 100 8 12 1
New York 010 000 0405 8 2
Fox Smith (8). and Howell: Mac
lie. Kennedy 4). Spencer (5),
Kramer (8). and Yvars.
Snyder Talks on
Game Resources
Chucker partridge and moun
tain goat may soon be hunted in
Oregon, Phil Snyder, assistant
director of the Oregon state
game commission, told members
of the Salem Lions club Thurs
day noon.
Snyder said that breeding
grounds for chucker partridge
have been established, and that
mountain goats have been re
leased in certain sections of
eastern Oregon.
When they become abundant,
hunting seasons will probably be
established for them, Snyder
said.
Snyder also told of the work
of the game commission's fish
ery division. He said that all of
the state's 16 fish hatcheries
are now operating at maximum
capacity, and that 18 lakes that
had never been stocked before
were stocked last year.
Snyder said that an airplane
is now being used to plant fish
in the high mountain lakes. The
use of the airplane cuts the cost
of such planting in half, he said.
To Beaverton
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Miller have
sold their home in Woodburn at
972 West Lincoln and are mov
ing this week-end to Beaver
ton. Miller, who has been em
ployed at Lacey's Men's Wear
here, will manage a men's cloth
ing store at Beaverton.
The geographic center of the
District of Columbia is near the
corner of Fourth and L streets,
N.W., Washington.
Oregon Solons Back
Anti-Communist Bill
Washington, Sept. 21 (JP) The
compromise communist control;
bill which went to President
Truman yesterday for his action
was given a boost on its way by
the four senators from Wash
ington and Oregon and seven of
the two states' 10 representatives.
The three congressmen who
didn't help. Reps. Angell and
Ellsworth of Oregon and Mack
of Washington, either were ab
sent or not voting. They all are
republicans.
Let'- On (- fli Mnvi" Toni-ht!
Mi- End Tnnlnht!
"Tea for Two"
'Humphrey Takes
a Chance"
ENDS TONIGHT!
"ONE WAY STREET"
"BLONDIE'S HERO"
Tomorrow - 2 Big Ones!
2ND TOP HIT!
YVONNE
I
Da CARLO - fmilip fkiend i
I m men ttnui - au uicitsm mmu on
EXTRA
Color Cartoon Warner News
NEW TOMORROW!
2 GEMS FROM MGM!
A WONDERRi
Iron
M-O-M
J'" r
m m
utni mni . inciff Mia
IWtuin iwum. vriK
."THREE
L li-nnnfi"
A
3 I,
fASIAl
KEENAN WYNN GALE BOBBINS
GLORIA 0E HAVEN
eased on tlx Lives and Muse of
BERT KALMAR and HARRY RUBY
2ND GREAT HIT!
il Now Showing!
f Starts alDusk! 1
1 1 Diana Lynn I
1 1 Charles Coburn 1 1
II Charlotte Greenwood II
fl In Technicolor II
III Vincent Price ill
111 Ellen Drew III
111 "Boron of Ariiono" ll
Opens 6:45 P.M.
NOW SHOWING!
(Shown to Adults Only)
SHE CHOSE
DEATH....
MTntTHM
stunn
mum
th turns
iii'M'iw'iuimn,TTi:.:in.-i
Savage Drama!
"BEYOND BENGAL"
NEXT WED. ONLY!
On Stage in Person
REX ALLEN
Great New Western Star!
HECONU FEATURE
"DANGEROUS VENTURE"
With Hopalonf Caaridy
D
Woodburn, Or.
NOW SHOWING
"The Green
Promise"
and
"Bells of
Coronado"
FRIDAY EVENING
September 22nd
WINDOWS
Will Be
UNVEILED
7 P.M.
JUDGING WILL
FOLLOW
FEATURING THE TRADITIONAL
TREASURE HUNT
FREE
TREASURE HUNT TICKETS
Available At All oi the Participating Stores!
Stores Will Be Open For Your Convenience!
Ph. 3-3467 Matinee Daily From 1 P.M.
SNEAK PREVUE TONITE!
At 8:45 P.M
ENDS TODAY! (Thur.)
Edmond O'Brien
'711 OCEAN DRIVE"
Alyca Louis
"FORBIDDEN JUNGLE"
(IN PLACE OF "FORBIDDEN JUNGLE")
STARTS TOMORROW!
IB
to
DONALD
Gale Storm Walter Brennan Vincent Price Eve Arden
CO-HIT! MADCAP MUGS AT IT AGAIN!
COLOR CARTOON
AIRMAIL FOX
MOVIETONE NEWS!
(
4