. i Rifleman X's Deed Gl Braves Red Fire to Escape Tokyo U.R) The army newspa per, Pacific Stars and Stripes, told the story today of "Rifle man X." Rifleman X was captured Sun day, during an Allied patrol be hind enemy lines. Monday he escaped and made his way back to U.N. lines. He is now recover ing from a compound fracture of the elbow and four bullet wounds in his knee. The story began when a U.N. patrol was attacked by Chinese communists behind the Red lines. Rifleman X and another U. N. soldier were captured and Timber Impales Lebanon Man Lebanon A 41-vear-old trim mer at the Nylund sawmill was critically injured Saturday when a jagged section of 2x6 buckled back out of the edger, catching the worker, Harry Stauffer in the groin and passing entirely through the lower portion of his body and left leg. He was near death from loss of blood when he reached the Lebanon hos pital. Two physicians worked over the man for several hours dur ing which time he received five pints of blood plasma and whole blood. Later in the night, two additional pints were given. His condition Tuesday was im proved, but he is still on the critical list. The injured man lives in Leb anon at 471 street. Tule Lake Land Lease Held Up Washington VP) Rep. Engle (D-Calif.) has requested a con ference with Secretary of the Interior Chapman on the Tulana Farms lease of 2,300 acres in the Tule Lake area of California. l- The renewal, recommended by he Reclamation Bureau's field office in the Klamath project, is before Chapman awaiting a de cision. Engle's secretary told a re porter the congressman asked Chapman not to act until Engle had a chance to present protests from veterans and others who are urging that the land be leas ed in small farms. The land is a swamp area, sub ject to periodic flooding, and has not been considered desir able for homesteading. Curiosity Supposedly standing at attention, two North Korean military police let curiosity get the best of them as they turn to watch a United Nations helicopter arrive at the Panmunjom, Korea, peace camp. (U. S. Navy photo), (Tele photo) ' Difficult to See What Reds Hope to Gain by Truce Stalling By PHIL NEWSOM (United Press Foreign News Editor) It is difficult to see just what, 1. Rush supplies and arms to the communists hope to gain by their stalling tactics in the armistice talks in Korea. The theory most frequently advanced is that they did not enter the armistice talks in good faith in the first place, and in tended to use them only as a breathing spell in which to build up their military forces for a final, victorious smash against the UN forces aligned against them in the fighting line. But among the correspondents sweating out the day-by-day talks at Panmunjom the feeling is growing that the allies have much to gam and little to .lose in a protracted fight for an ef fective armistice. The correspondents feel that the present "twilight" war is giving the allies time to: Council of Churches Elects McKinney The Saiem 'Council of Churches Tuesday night select ed W. W. McKinney, attorney, to head the organization. He succeeds Dr. Victor Hugo Sword. W. H. Taylor was named vice president; Mrs. Robert Gregg, secretary; Beryl Holt, treasurer; Mrs. L. H. Randle president of the Salem Council of Church Women and Lawrence Monk, president of the Salem Christian Youth Council, representative vice presidents. IT'S TIE RIFFIC! Do your pres ent ties No more suit your eyet? X Did St. Nick leave fou lards Unwearable 'iy dizzy bards? Want a new neckwear look Without dent- A A, Ing check- j ' THEN Watch and Wail for the Tie-Tame News! Four Comers Four Corners Listen, learn and look; the 4-H club are still on the move. .The officers of the Rickey Rustlers, Darrel Stafek, president, David Larsen, vice president and news report er, accompanied by Mrs. M Swearingen, leader, and Mr. and Mrs. R. Stafek, assistant lead ers, attended the Marion County Work Shop 4-H club meeting at Keizer school Saturday aft ernoon. Proper ways of con ducting meetings were discussed. Awards were given to out standing members. David Lar sen of the Rickey Rustlers won the award for rabbits, a Cali fornia doe. The student council officers elected last week at Lincoln school are: president, Gary Jor- genson; vice president, Cathy bnook; secretary, Leon Char tier; treasurer Fay Futrell. Nelson Italiano, hard-running halfback, set eight new Florida State university individual foot ball records this past season. Indo-China to beef up those French associated states against possible Red Chinese thrust, either before or after the Korean conflict is settled. 2. Complete preparations for the defense of Formosa 3. Build up the South Korean army which must take over the defense of the Republic of Ko rea when the United Nations army goes home. f ... Meanwhile, of course, the United Nations is tieing up near ly 1,000,000 communist fight ing men in North Korea and along the Manchurian border, at comparatively small cost. And, if the communists are using this time to buld up their offensive forces in Korea, so are the allies building up their strength. The concentration of allied tanks and guns wedged into the line across Korea's narrow 120 mile waist is probably the great est in all' history. Allied gunners have zeroed in every foot of the terrain over which any attacking army must come. There isn't only one allied line across Korea. There are sev- eral each as bristling as the one before it. , Even the communists must re coil at the thought of the enor mous price they would pay for any all-out attack on those lines which each day grow stronger. There still is the danger that the communists in a desperate bid for victory may elect to spread the war, invading Indo China, Burma or Thailand. The Western powers already have warned that any such bid would bring an immediate emer gency session of the United Na tions to consider counter-action The Western Powers also have promised retaliation should the communists agree to an-armistice in Korea and then break it. Any sucn retaliation certainly would involve the bombing of Chinese cities and more hardship for the Chinese people. Thus the question: What do the communists hope to gain by stalling at Panmunjom? Sage Brusher Doesn't Savvy Rabbit Raising By Ron Gemmell Didn't know, until I saw It in the newspapers, that there could be such a thing as a Rabbit Breeders' association. Reason why it confused this writer is that, being an old east Oregonian, I can remem ber only too well how they used to conduct those rabbit killing drives that, along with disease, just about wiped out those long-earred sage brush lopers. Was a time when farmer folk in that area would make a regular picnic out of circling an area, driving the jacks into a corral and clubbing them to death. Of course, so I've been ad vised, the kind of rabbits the Marion and Polk Rabbit Breeders' association is inter ested in are somewhat differ ent animals from those big denizens of the dessert that we used to feed to the chick- Billy Graham Fills Washington Armory Washington VP) Billy Graham's plea to "give in to Christ" brought forth 236 per sons as converts Tuesday night, the- most at one time in the evangelist's 2'4 -week-old capital crusade. Every seat in the National Guard armory, which has an 8,000 legal capacity, was filled. Some 200 persons stepped for ward at the young preacher's call for professions of faith, A score or more followed when he said: "I'm giving just 30 seconds more to those people with one foot in the Kingdom of God Whoever you are, you must give in to Christ tonight. Graham's topic was "Judg ment" and he used the story of Noah and The Ark as an illustra tion. He said Noah repeatedly warned sinners to repent. They listened too late, he said, after "the judgment of the Lord fell upon them" in the form of the great flood. The revival is to continue through Feb. 10. Florida Has 'Cold Spell' Miami, Fla. VP) The temper ature dropped to 44 degrees in Miami Wednesday to make this the coldest January 30 since the weather bureau began keeping records 41 years ago. The previous low was 47 In 1940. taken to a Chinese communist interrogation point. m w 'An officer asked me what my regiment's plans were," the rifleman said. "I told him to ask my battalion commander. I'm only a Pfc." The Chinese officer hit him in the face. After more questioning, the U. N. soldiers were put in prisoner of war cage. The rifle man proposed escape. 'My buddy said he didn't think he could make it because he had sprained his ankle the night before," the rifleman said. So he-decided to go alone. ... When a Chinese guard brought them bowls of rice in the morn ing, Rifleman X grabbed one smashed it into the communist's face and darted from the cage. Other guards opened fire on him. Two bullets shattered his elbow, Four more hit his knee But he didn't stop. The rifleman had watched the sun rise that mornine and had fixed his course before making his escape attempt. His figuring was correct. He made a crutch from a tree branch and hours later reached the river his patrol had cror the night before, when he wad ed in, Red soldiers saw him and began shooting. I heard the shots and I could see the water kicking up splash es near me. Somebody at an out post or somewhere saw me and called for fire back at them," he said. Later Monday night he had reached a company position and was rushed to a hospital to un dergo surgery. Tuesday after noon his division's commanding general visited him and placed a Silver Star and a Purple Heart on his cot. The Silver Star, the general said, was an "interim" award, The Distinguished Service Cross will follow. Plane Bums on Test Flight Spokane (JP) An Air Force B-36 bomber undergoing a check with manufacturer's representa tives aboard burned near the runway at Fairchild Air Force Base Tuesday night. None of the 12 persons aboard were injured. Air Force officers said the huge plane skidded into deep snow at the side of the runway. Flames broke out on one wing and spread quickly. A board of officers named by the Air Force immediately start ed an investigation of the accident; Representatives of Consolidat- ed-Vultee Corp. were aboard the plane checking personnel on flying procedures, officers said- Marker of Salem to Head Heart Campaign Portland Appointment of Leroy J. Marker, president of the Salem Life Underwriters' Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Wednesdayan. 30, 19547 association, as chairman of the Oregon Heart association 1052 fund-raising campaign in Mar ion, Linn and Benton counties. during the month of February, is announced by H. G. (Bud) Horn, state campaign manager. The program in the three counties will be sponsored, Horn said, by the Salem asso ciation. The state-wide activ ity is sponsored by the Life Underwriters' Association of Oregon. Oregon's quota of the $8 mil lion national goal, is $60,000. Seventy-five per cent of the Hare's Why , Anacin Is Ilk a doctor's prescription. That Is, Anacin contains not one but a combination of medically proved active ingredients. Anacin is spe cially compounded to give FAST, LONG LASTING relief. Don't wait. Buy Anacin today. money collected In Oregon will be allocated, according to Horn, for the purchase of new heart study and treatment equipment for the University of Oregon medical school. Reappraisals Urged McMinnville VP) Reappraisal of all property in Oregon, with the aim of reducing cattle ranch ers' taxes, was proposed here Monday at the annual meeting of the Western Oregon Livestock association. There are two sides to the question of value. What you get for what you pay determines wjicthcr or not you are get ting full' value. There is no question about this . . . that here you get the finest diamond your money can buy . . . whether you spend 150 or $1,000! CONVENIENT TERMS QUICKLY ARRANGED leeiimtilMmttTiiaLVMB.,,, . ,. ,. sUuJ 98c 8x10 PHOTO VALENTINE SPECIAL To Celebrate the New Management of BI5H0P-M0DERNE STUDIOS 520 State St. Offer good for limited time only Bruce cleans as It waxes without scrubbing! 1A Vsj j for weed P J VTl ftaeJeew teeu tTJ Now you can have sparkling clean and lustrous floors without ever scrubbing or mopping! Try the Bruce method of cleaning floors at you wax. If it isn't the easiest floor care you've ever known easier even than any "self-polishing" waxes return your purchase to the manu facturer for a full refund plus postage. Prefects ef I. L. Bruce Ce., Memphis, Tenn. WerWl LarsjeM Maker W Hera'weea' Fleering Mothers1.;' March ruuv 0 BEAUTIFY EVERY HMt FURNITURE RICH IN TRADITIONAL CHARM "Home-Planned" Furniture Helps Dreams Come True You're doubly smart to plan the home of your dreams around Old Colony. Thanks to Its "Home-Planned" designs, you can be sure (just like buying from open stock) that later additions to living, dining and bedrooms will retain the authentic traditional Amer ican atmosphere of your present purchases. And it has the extra advantage of Heywood-Wakefleld craftsmanship that's been fam ous Since 1826. And don't ask us how its exclusive finish gets its lovely, hand-rubbed look, and keeps it so well. That's just some thing you pick up in a century of furniture-making. Sofa 179.50 Chair 89.50 SEE OUR NEW SPICE CABINET RADIO $8950 New Shipment "Wilton" Novelties Miniature black Iron skillets with painted raised 7 Km Amish Figures WC TINY IRON & TRIVET Hand decorated satin black Iron set 69c SALT & PEPPER SHAKERS Hand decorated white and black. Coffee grinder, tea kettle, kitchen range, sugar scoop, stein, Engine and $1 O C coal car set; per set Miniature Trivets Satin black Iron. Grape, Cathedral, Family Tree, Eagle Miniature Skillet Kn Ash Tray. Smoky Black Iron, i diameter 3UC FREE PARKING FREE DELIVERY Open Evenings 'til 9 p.m. (Except Sot.) i We Give Green Stamps For a Charming, Comfortable BED ROOM Choose a delightful set in Pine Beautiful Double Dresser with dust-proof drawers and center guides. Large mirror. Large comfortable full-size bed. 3 Pieces for . . . Nite Stand with Drawer And 2 Shelves $24.50 WEEK-END SPECIAL THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY Smoky Black Trivets. Authentic re production. Assorted poular designs round or with handles. 9-inch hand decorated wall plates with hangers. Fruit subjects. Kolorcraft hearth broom. The tic." Assorted colors. 24-inch table lamp, brass white glass with ivy design, parchment shade. 'Rus- base. Paper Sic $298 $498 COLONIAL FURNITURE