Local Paragraph Fclton Lead Discussion Judge Joseph B. Felton will lead a discussion or proposed changes in divorce proceedings at a reg ular monthly meeting of the Family and Child Welfare Coun "'cil at 12 noon Thursday at the Senator hotel. The changes to ""be discussed are proposed in . Senate Bills 288 and 291 now "Deiore ine uregon legislature. Chiropractors Meet District 8, Oregon Association of Chiro r';,practlc Physicians, met at the ,, Pine Inn, Highway 99E, Satur- oay, tor tneir monthly confer ence. Following the dinner, joinuy anenaea dv the mix. 'Iliary, the doctors conducted their business meeting. An out ' standing educational program followed with a demonstration r'of latest research techniques in Chiropractic adjustment. , Health Association Meeting ,,-rne Doara of directors of the Marion County Tuberculosis and Health association will meet at , 8 o'clock Wednesday nlKht in ,lrie new treatment building of tne ureeon state hosnital. otto Swopil, president of the associa- ' tion, will preside. A tour of the 'TB unit will be made, after which Dr. Dean Brooks, assistant " superintendent of the hospital, . ana ur. nuaoipn nosenieu, stall physician in charge of the TB ..unit, will speak. Washington Stamp The re .'.recently issued 3-cent Wash ington territorial commemora tive stamp has been placed on " sale at the Salem post office. "The original sale was held in Olympia. The stamp, green in ""color, portrays an early pioneer family gazing at a typical ter ritorial scene, embracing an ex panse of water with mountain '"ranges rising in the distance. Tile Clogged A. B. McClel- if land of 240 Boone road, has ' complained to the county court that a tile across the road .. near his place has become clog ged which results in water backing up over his property. ' j The engineers have been asked ''to investigate. Eggs Boosted Egg prices were higher in Salem, Wednes day, following similar advances "on the Portland produce mar ket.. The buying list here now . is as follows: AA grade, 46 cents; large A, 44-50 cents; me ''dium AA, 43 cents; medium A, .41-45 cents; small, 37 cents. In ' "the wholesale list, large A grade are quoted at 56 cents, the medium nt 51 cents. The ' 1 advance was generally two ' cents all along the line. T Optimist Program Charles ,,A. Sprague will be the speaker , at the - meeting of the Salem ,, Optimist club at the Senator hotel Thursday noon. His sub , ject will be "The United States and the United Nations." ... r-i. n 1 xt , - nunt. - A needed because of packed snow "at Government Camp, Timber , jlne, Bly and Austin, the Ore--gon Highway Commission said Wednesday. Binoculars Taken A pair of 12-power binoculars valued at $225 was taken from his car at Silver Creek Falls state park ' 'Sunday, Homer Rue, Route 3, Silverton, reported to Salem city police Tuesday. P" Check Charge Brought A J charge of issuing a check with i non-sufficient funds to cover it ! was brought against Charles Ber- I tram Davis, Jr., 245 East Miller , street. Tuesday. He was arrest' t ed by city police on a district J court warrant charging that he issued the $20 check to a service J station. He was released on his i own recognizance to appear Thursday. Club 16 Meetlnr Tnumaonri club No. 16 will meet at the home of Mrs. Anna Arnold, 2256 Claud street, Thursday night. Rotary Told Navy Progress Electronics developments in the navy are "beyond belief." Commander Robert Tomlinson, public relations officer for the 13th naval district, told Rotary ciud members today at the Mar lon hotel. A radio station located at Ar lington, northwest of Seattle, can send messages to ships as far off as the Indian ocean, and is a problem to the population for miles around because of its immense power, the speaker said. The navy has also made great progress with guided missies, which have been kept under wraps in the Korean war as a "Sunday punch" to be thrown when it has to be, Commander Tomlinson explained. 'Push-button warfare isn t here yet, but the navy has come a long way," he declared. Tomlinson said the navy has moved 50,000,000 barrels of pe troleum products and 20,000,000 tons of supplies to Korea and has hurled more ammunition in the first two years of this war than in all World War II. Cobe Grabenhorst introduced the speaker. Reynolds Allen, vice-president, presided. Elton Thompson, former Klamath Falls Rotarian, was introduced as a new member here. Burma Says U.S. Aids Guerrillas Rangoon, Burma, CP) Defense Minister Ba Swe said Wednes day the Burmese government has conclusive proof "a few Americans" have been active In training and arming Chinese Na tionalist guerrillas now fighting Burma's Army near this coun try's borders with Communist China and Thailand. But the defense minister took pains to say in an interview there is no proof the Ameri cans are agents of the U. S government and added: "I think the United States government is anxious to take the necessary steps to cause the surrender and eviction of Kuomintang Chinese Nationalist troops from Burma." Ba Swe, one of the top men in Burma's anti-communist gov ernment, is the first Burmese official to go on public record as saying Americans are in volved in the mysterious supply of arms to an estimated 12,000 Nationalist guerrillas who have been organizing in the remote, mountainous border area. Burglars (Continued from Page 1) and broke window in the car. They apparently failed in an at tempt to wire across the igni tion to start the car, so ran sacked the glove compartment and left. If the same persons took the Hanauska car as presumed, they apparently forced entry there too and wired around the ignition switch as the car was locked and the keys were in the house, the officers said. In all of the building entries, desk and cabinet drawers were gone through and papers, scat tered about but nothing was tak en, they reported. Apparently, they were only 'after money and found none. The British statesman said that "with the growing strength of the West there la no reason why it should break out." He called for support of the United Nations as a "world meeting place" where opposing forces can get together and try to settle their differences with out war. Eden called on the Commu nist world to agree to the Indian Korean plan which the Assem bly adopted last December. This plan would permit Red prison ers who don't want to go home to stay behind. He recalled that former Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishlnsky had said the prisoner question was the only issue preventing an armistice. Russia Grilled (Continued from Page 1) The Ainu of Northern Japan are believed to be descendants of the primitive Neolithic in habitants of the country. r4 ?Z? "' I Xajg,.; Red Ambassador Vasily Kuznetsov (above), deputy foreign minister of Russia, has been named by the new Soviet regime as its ambassa dor to Chrlna. (AP Wire Friday Night Comedy At Richmond School Salem Civic Players will pre sent a three-act comedy, "The Young Scamp," Friday night of this week at Richmond school, In the cast are: ' Alexander Brycroft, played by R. J. Portal; Kenneth Fraser, Charles Domogalla; Amby Trott, James Carey; Homer Blunt, John Branson; Alexander Beecroft, Jim Baer; Samuel Dockett, Ar thur Davis; Zeta Esmond, Patri cia Noyes; Thllena Esmond, Helen Anderson; Dorothy Es mond, Shirley McCauley; Betsy Gowdy. Marg Branson; Mrs. Louella Leslie, Helen Lucas; Clarabelle Leslie, Sharon Barker. Miss Beulah Graham is the di rector. The play takes place In Rocky Roost, a bachelor's sum mer home near Squantaug, Mass. Proceeds of the play go to the PTA fund. Range and Pasture On Plains Said Bad Denver (U.R) Range and pasture conditions in the eastern Rock ies and Central Plains on March 1 were the poorest as of that date since 1937, the Department of Agriculture reported today. The USDA. in Its western live stock and range report, said that western ranges and pastures had a short supply of old feed, and that there was a shortage of soil moisture to start, new grass. Only in Oregon were range and pasture conditions above the 10-year 1942-51 average. While Assembly President Lester B. Pearson of Canada, gavelled for order. Lodge re minded Gromyko that "the U. S, army you seek to smear is the same U. S. army which stood beside the Russian army to de feat the Nazis in Europe." Lodge told Gromyko that "the U. S. army was good enough for you in 1942, 1943, 1944 and 1945. It would be the same to day had not the policies of the Soviet government so tragical ly changed." Earlier Eden told the Assem bly that it was in nobody's in terest that World War II should break out. Reject Salary (Continued from Page 1 Wholesale Food Prices Unchanged New York W Wholesale food prices, as measured by the Dun & Bradstreet food index, remained at $6.28 this week- unchanged from a week ago. The figure is the highest reach ed by the index this year. In the same week a year ago. the index stood at $6.58 4.6 per cent above this week's fig ure. SUBLIMITY MEE'jflNG Sublimity The 5t. Boniface high parents association will hold its regular monthly meet ing Thursday, March 12, at 8 p.m. in the club rooms. The athletic banquet will be dis cussed. The La Grande representative also declared that under the proposed Integrated federal se curity and state retirement sys tem, contributions of itate em ployes for retirement -vould be materially reduced, Increasing their take home pay. and In ad dition, the state workers would get additional benefits under tne new plan. Sen. Dean WaUter, co-cnair- man of the Joint committee, ran into a brick wall when ne sug gested that the state interagency committee and Interim commit tees be prevented from making junkets. Sen. Walker proposed a stand ard clause in all bills authorizing state-expense trips empowering the director of finances to refuse the trip if he considered it junket. "The 11 western states meet in Palm Springs and Timberline lodse. Walker said, "and I don't think those places are the proper ones in which to hold such meetings. No Hands Raised When Sen. Walker called for a show of hands on his sugges tion, not a solitary hand was raised. Then Sen. Belton sug gested that some curb be placed on travels of legislative interim committees. But discussion of this subject was delayed when Rep. Alva Goodrich of Bend declared: "We'll accept the idea for fu ture study." Capital Journal, Salem, Ore, Wednesday, March 11, ltsi The committee approved a bill which permit political sub-di visions to receive civil defense equipment from the federal gov ernment under the same terms as the state and cities and coun ties. The government payi 50 per cent of the cost, the state 25 and the cities or counties pay the remaining 25 per cent. Sen. Gibson objected to the bill, declaring that he would like to have the entire law re "This is just another grab," he said. "We talk about federal spending but we grab all we can get from the government." 8 Ex-cabinet (Continued from Page 1) of money in payment for annual leave accrued at the time the officials left government service. "Unquestionably," the subcom mittee said, "a great many of the persons involved accepted cash for their accrued annual leave In the conviction that they were taking only what was due them. "But the facts are that Con gress never Intended that accrued leave be settled on a cash basis The intent was to follow the es tablished business practice of improving employe morale and efficiency by providing adequate vacation periods. The civil serv ice ruling putting such cash payments Into effect is, in our opinion, a violation of the in tent of Congress." U.S. Pilots (Continued from Page 1) The Prague version was that the American jets had penetrated 25 miles Inside Czechoslovakia, and had been intercepted by Czech planes. Prague said a fight took place and one American plane wn struck by Czech bullets. : The communist version said the crip pled jet crossed back into Ger many with flames pouring from its fuselage. . C. 8. Pilots Fired No Shots The American pilots Lt. War ren C. Brown of Henderson, Colo., and Lt. Donald C. Smith of Marysville, O., said they did not fire at the Czech MIGs. Ask ed why, they replied they would rather not answer the question. But the Air Force spokesman said later the only reason the Americans did not return the MIG fire was because they had no chance the Intruders vanish ed so quickly after the shooting. Informed sources in Washing ton said that while officials were taking the firmest attitude to ward Czechoslovakia, no consid eration was being given to break ing diplomatic relations with Prague. Most probable lines of action appeared to be demands on the Czechs for an apology and cash . indemnity for loss of the plane. The American pilots suffered no serious Injuries. Estelle Brown is now located at the Beauty Nook, 157 S. Liberty. Ph. 36831. 60 Rummage sale, good values, Gold Star Mothers. 60 COURT NEWS Chicken dinner March 13, 6 p.m., Salem high school. Adults $1, children 50c. 81 Paint with glamorizing Treas ure Tones. See our outstanding Wallpaper selection. Chuck Clarke Co., 255 N. Liberty. 60 Air-steamship tickets anywhere. Kugel, 3-7694, 153 N. High St. 60 Circuit Court Portland General Electric Co. Ta State TTwtrn-i.liiF.trla Commission : Order giving plaintiff until June IS within which to Ille its D1U OT exception! ana tranrcripb on appeal. Martin Caswell Broom va George Alex ander and Vlnll O'Msller ol stale peni tentiary: Objections to flndlnga of the rmtrt in decision of March V. filed by defendants In connection with applica tion of plaintiff for writ ox naoeas corpus. William L. and Delia Mae Gamer vs Carl B. and Frances E. Damaske: De fendant motion for Judgment In their favor in spite of jury veruict. Non-Support Charged Wil liam M. Austin, arrested on a charge of non-support of a minor child, requested a preliminary hearing in district court Wed nesday, and was released on $500 bail. Hearing was set for March 23. ' Bonnie Davis, one of Salem's best known beauticians, now as sociated with Loveall - Miller Beauty Salon. For appointment phone 3-7870. 64 Quick service! Have glasses in one day, made to prescription of your optometrist by Semler Op tical Offices, Waters Adolph Bide., State and Commercial. Phone 3-3311. 60 War Casualties Now Total 130,992 Washington VP) Announced U.S. battle casualties In Korea reached 130,992 Wednesday, an Increase of 260 since last week. Killed In action, 20,714 Wounded. 9.260. Missing, 13,- 018. Total. 130.992. Following Is a breakdown of the casualties by services: . . n n nnn 1 ne Army, iUZ,2uo. navy, wi. c ( f- j Air Force, 1,425. Marine Corps, prices $g to $35 Bcst ,election, St. Joseph bargain rummage sale Thursday, Friday and Sat urday, 285 Chemeketa, 62 Goodwill truck in Salem every Tuesday & Friday. Ph. 42248 for pickups. 60 Junior Guild rummage sale March 12-13. 560 Chemeketa. 61 PaUv R. Todd vs David A. Todd: Di vorce complaint, chargln cruel and in human treatment. Ask $80 monthly aup DOTt during the time she ii learning the trade of a beautician. Seeks restoration of former name of FerryhlU and adjudica tion of rights or parties In connection with household goods and automobile. Married at Nehalem, Ore,, July 29, 1950. MarJorle Carlisle vi Bar B. CarlUIe; Divorce complaint, alleging abandonment. Married Aus. 4, 1947 at Vancouver, Wash. Asks that matter of support lor three minor children be held In abeyance sub ject to further order of the court. State vs Harry Ewood Corey: Notice of appeal filed from Jury verdict that found defendant guilty of driving motor vehicle while under the Influence of In toxicating liquor. Mary Ralvorsen vs Robert P. Halvorsen: Motion seeking custody of minor child and 1100 monthly during litigation. Erdene M. Anderson vs Elmer 6. An derson: Order directing defendant to ap pear In court March 10 and show why he hould not be punished for contempt of court for failure to comply with the decree of the court of August 20, 1952 with reference to certain payments to the plaintiff. SALEM ALTERATION SHOP. Edna Cushman, 474 Ferry St., Phone 46624, . Alteration, re weaving, draperies and skirts made to order. 61 23,502. BORN The Capital Journal Welcomes the Following New Citizens: IALRM MEMORIAL HOSPITAL DAVIS To Mr. and Mrs. James T. Deils, 3535 Harold Ave., a boy. March 10. 8CHEI15BMANN To Mr. and Mrs. Uon J. Scheldemann. SOS N. Collate 81, a bor, March 10. MACLEAN To Mr. and Mrs. Charles Maclean, 1334 Cnemeketa St., a UN. March 10. , . KISTNER To Mr. ard Mrs. Karl A. Klstner, 111 Oaten. St.. Woodborn, a boy. March 10. BAI.F.M GENERAL HOSPITAL , , JEUJSOM To Mr. and Mrs. IrcM 1 , Illion. Bt. 1. . Boa 413. Albanr, a boy, , .March 10. . . , ! BAILST To Mr. and Mrs. JscX Bailer. . Rt. 3. Boi M. a tlrl. March 10. . I SHAW To Mr. and Mrs. MeUln Shaw, J ,170 Monro. Mr., a boj, March 10. . .SILVERTON HOSPITAL CHmsTIANSON-To Mr. and Mrs. Thor iChrlsUanK. a tor, March It. now. Lormons, 1109 Edgewater. Open until 7 p.m. 63 Good rummage, over Green baums. Wed., March 11th. 9 to 4. 59 Probate Court N. E. Abbot estate: Estate appraised at 17,450. Assumed business name certificate of Robert's Grocery and Market. Aumsrllle, filed by Klta C. and Omer J. Roberts. Notice of retirement from Roberta Oro cerr and Service station filed by W. J. Roberta. James Harold Nelson uardlanshh! Or. der authorlilnc auardlan to purchase a piano for ward and to pay to herself the sum of $68.50 for his support. Oeorte M. Whipple estate: Order ad mlttlm will to probate and appointing Viola B. McKlroy executrix. Approximate value of estate I50O0 In personsl property. Allc, Adella Townscnd estate: Order confirming oalt of real property to B. u. Mason. Chin Up club rummage store, 173 So. Liberty street, Salem, needs donated furniture, clothes, etc. Phone 3-3018 for pickup. Open for business 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 59 Castle Permanent Wavers, 305 Livesley building, phone 3-3863. Permanents $5 and up. Ruth Ford, Manager. 89 Moving and storage across the street, across the nation. Call Russ Pratt. Capital City Trans fer Co. age Anna M. Sheridan eitate: Pinal ariviunt to be heard April 13. Rupert A. Roc en eitate: PstitlAn frt- the aale of real eitate of the probable vaiae 01 ijuo. Marriage License Win. W. Corert. 21. Wlllametu TT in, dent, and Mary J. Howe, 27, teacher, 1143 Lealle St. Geo. J, Maearrell, 34, U. a. atr force, Kt. 2, scro, and Phyllis U. Mualc, 17, tuaent, nt, j, a J ma 7 Hit. Robert Barnard, letal, mall carrier, 3M5 PUhcr road, and Minnie M. Rernoldi, letal, home wife, 1385 North Liberty road. Albanr Jamea H. DeMoeu, 11. RTO I, narriwun. ana urene V. Ownby, ia, Eutene. Matt M. Schuid, 34. Laconb, and Kath leen Hamilton, 21, Albany. Prank N. Olavan, 2S, WUhran, Waeh., at Baits apart, u, iwmi bob. 3ft) Z0 OPEN FRIDAY N1TES TILL 9 court street store has this new Admiral j te? "HmT ' mvM aseeeemwamwsasawasawwaawaasaawaawawaawjaa : j . '11 Come see Admiral for '53 I I TlWt'iiNl UMM DEFROSTING ' l ' 'fim i You can own it NOW! Admiral 7-Minute Flash Defrost-' j I k, Viw-EsJ J I M't'5P ' ing- cleaner faster, far handier, too, and at the lowest U Xf ""'" 'I cost ever for automatic defrosting! Think of it! No clocks Y rtkfiC" "'js ' JLif or dials t0 Bet Now yu cnoose your own 10081 con" ir f-"W 'SaJSi ' l$ypy venient defrosting time. Push a button... frost is gone J ' "fltf ' -3 V almost before you know it. Quick easy trouble-free! iH fjjnSf Olljr Tf-'l I TSiJ4 It's THE BETTER automatic defrosting you've waited ' . ' nlajjSi I IffigflljWf, I for. Only in Admiral. Priced to save you up to $84 in lllPjlll-r-i' '1 j I new 1953 Admirals on display today! , IjL J . '- Appliances, downstairs tlroatifta oift nvnUobU ' ( tjU NEW Full-length Cold NEW Extra-Deep Criipert NEW Butter Conditioner NEW Full-Width Freezer NEW Glacier Blue Interior NEW Handy Door Sh.lv.s 3 3'95 NO DOWN PAYMENTKK Wf GIVE AND REDEEM GREEN STAMPS