Pag 14 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon Thursday, September 3, 195S H ARMANI ACS COMING I, i y.jtww These wizards of the harmonica will be the attraction at the Capitol Shopping Center School Days drawing Tuesday, September 8. ' Harmaniacs Will Appear at Shopping Center Sept. 8 Scheduled to appear rt the Capitol Shopping Center School - Dayr drawing next Tuesday, Sept. 8 at 8:30 p.m. are The Jiarmanlacs, an out standing comedy carmonica trio hxiiing from Portland. Thtt Harmaniacs, relatively AWAITS EXECUTION II I it r r , t J. new professional entertainers. have been receiving rave no tices all over the Pacific North' west where they have played at uch spots as the Clover club in Portland, Early Birds in Spokane and have done TV work. They got their start many years ago on Stars of Tomorrow and the Journal Juniors and they have now added a record contract with first release due shortly to their growing list of accomp lishments. . ,ih . m.m.. prior to negotiations between ing as many as eight harmoni- Mjf nd the Navv or the at the same time. The "' . , ., , inai visit was xnaae govern- Court Lenient With Students Portland MV-Two Wlllanv ette University sophomores ventured into sale of mari juana as "a lark nothing more than that,- reaerai Judge Cus J. Solomon said late Wednesday and he put them on probation for three years. The two, Charles L. Naone, 18. of Hawaii and Charles C. Lewis, 20, ot Seattle, pleaded guilty to the sales for which they were arrested last May near the campus at Salem. The judge sent them out ot court while he studied reports, then four hours later called them back and placed each on pro bation. He said a narcotics agent agreed their activity was "a short-lived affair." Naone was at Willamette on a scholarship won in Hawaii. Both were football players. Capf. Lanigan Quits Service Word has been received in Salem of the retirement the first of this month of Capt. E. J. Lanigan, USNR, who was instrumental- in securing the Salem Naval Air Facilty for this city. The captain, who has been in the Department of Navy, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations for several years, was in Salem to check the Sa lem airport for the facility YOUNGSTERS IN TROUBLE I L f K aiil" ts m niii i if it Firemen with tin snips cut open an oil drum In which Rpmle Perry, 8, wedged himself at Pasadena, Calif. The boy crawled Into the empty drum to hide from play mates and then couldn't get out It took the fir laddies an hour to free him. (AP Wirephoto) ft m imfWi -lOTi 1 UMiMHUX cas at the - same School Days drawing, which will include the awarding of many prizes with an automa tic washer heading the list, will follow the entertainment on the program, Free tickets to participate in the School Days promotion, which will culminate ' In a Grand Drawing on Sept. 19, at which a Hillman-Minx Califor- nian will be awarded, are available at all stores' belong ing to the Shopping Center Merchant's Associaton. The promotion has been running since August 16. DEAN TO BE FREED Panmunjom ( Maj. Gen. William F. Dean, who won a Medal of Honor battling Reds beside his men, will be freed from captivity In a few days. the communists said Thurs day. ber 22, 1948, in company with Capt. C. F. Greber (now rear admiral and retired), Seattle, who was In charge of the Nav al Air Reserves for the 13th Naval district, Comdr. W. W. Jones from the 13th Naval district, and Lt. John Wallace, both of Seattle, and Lt. Wil liam Veering who came from the nation's capital with Capt. Lanigan. Lanigan also visited the fa cility once or twice after it was established here.' Mrs. Earle Dennison, arse nic poisoner of her 2-ycar-old niece, enters Kilby Prison at Montgomery, Ala., to await her date with the electric chair Sept. 4. With 1 the 85-year-old nurse is ! Highway Patrol Captain Oliver T. McDuff. Mrs. Den-, nison will be the first white woman to be electrocuted in Alabama, .A Negro woman went to the chair in 1930. (AP Wirephoto) Nurseto Diein Electric Chair Montgomery, Ala, W) A nurse who poi&oned the In fant niece she had insured for $5,500, then calmly watched the body cut open for an au topsy, dies In the electric chair tonight unless Gov. Gor don Persons intervenes. If she pays the penalty, 55-year-old Mrs. Earle Dennison will be the first while woman ever electrocuted in Alabama. One other white woman was sentenced to death, but the verdict was reversed on ap peal. A Negro woman was put to death in 1930. The governor, who can torn- mute Mrs. Dennison' sentence to life imprisonment if he chooses to spare her life, will announce his decision follow nig a morning clemency hear ing. Unless he overrules the trial court's verdict, the frail, im passive nurse will be led from her death cell at Kilby Prison at one minute aftrr mldinunt and electrocuted tor the ar senic slaying of 2-year-old bmrley Diann Weldon. She also was charged with poisoning another Weldon child, Polly Ann, but was never tried lor that offense. Arsenic was found in the bodies of both girls. The haggard, graying widow was convicted by a male 1urv at Wetumpka in August 1952, but the death sentence was set appeal to the State Supreme Court. The court upheld the verdict last June and then denied a rehearing a month later. Plane Output Cut Over 900 Washington UJ3 Air Force sources disclosed today- that 900 to 1,000 airplanes have been ordered eliminated from current production plans.' About 75 per cent of the planes to be eliminated are fighters and bomben to have been delivered about two years hence. , ' Pentagon sources estimated the cutback will save TOO mil lion to one billion dollars. Roger Lewis, assistant Air Force secretary In charge of procurement, without confirm ing the figures, tola the United Press that the slash will not in terfere with the buildup to- A COUPLE OF CALIFORNIANS sj Sj- t ,fV w V , . 4 i foVf'.? V V V "'.. f I ' . - v ' .u ; ' , I i .fl.'i ' 4 ' 1 K -Tni i itn i I - - - , i -f wow V LOOK I AT THIS Vice President Richard Nixon, whose home town is Whlttier, Calif., waves to Legionnaires after being in troduced at the Legion's opening session by National Com mander Lewis K. Gough (right), another Californian from Pasadena. Nixon addressed the 35th annual con vention of the Legion at St. Louis. (AP Wirephoto) ward an interim goal of 120 wings. ... Lewis said that planes still planned will be sufficient for 143 wings if that goal is rein stated by the newly installed Joint Chiefs of Staff, who are restudying all defense plans. Bread Prices to Go Upward New York VP) The house wife who thought that falling wheat prices on the Chicago Board of . Trade might lead to cheaper bread at the grocery may De startled next week. Some brands of bread will cost a cent a loaf more after Labor Day. In a few cities the price has already risen. Bakers say that's because flour costs them more now than a year ago. Lard costs them more than at any time since 1951." The" milk which some use costs more. Labor in baking and trucking the bread costs more. Pictures of wheat surpluses overflowing storage bins and being left on the ground led many to expect a drop in the cost of flour and bread. Purchasing agents in the bak- ing industry, however, say tney pay so cents more than last year for a hundred pound sack of the kind of flour used in bread making. Flour millers explain it this way: Bakers of bread prefer flour from'Jiard red winter wheat. This year's crop of that var iety was only 70 per cent of the size of the 1952 crop in contrast to the entire wheat crop, which fell Into the bump er class again this year. 88,000 Cut From Federal Payrolls Washington m The Civil Service Commission says fed eral payrolls have been trim med since January by a net of about 88,00Q. persons. ' As of July 31, the commis sion' reported yesterday, there were 2,47,200 federal em ployes, compared with the June 1945 high ot 3,769,846 and the postwar low of 1.699, 444 in June 1950. Army Cancels Cut in Draff Washington U The de fense department has cancel led scheduled rut In army manpower and will continue drafting men at about the preeeni rat until stable peace la achieved In Korea, it was learned today. A high Pentagon official aald tht administration hi dtclded It would be foolhardy to weaken the U.S. mllitarv position In the Far East simply because a truce has been signed. The defense danartmant previously had believed th Korean truce would make lt possible to trim the army's strength by 50.000 men. .nrt thus reduce draft calls from the current level of 23,000 a month to about 19,000 a month starting in November. But the Pentason nfflplal said the November draft call, not yet officially announced, will be for 23,000 men. He aaid draft calls will re. main at that level, barring an increase in enlistments, unless Or until it annean that " I firm agreement" has be n reached with the communists at the forthcoming Korean Political Conference. The 50,000 cut -in army U-ength would have been in addition to a reduction of 100,000 men - planned as an economy move before the Korean truce was signed. Lamb May Hold Democratic Purse Washington V Edward Lamb of Toledo, Ohio, was said by an informed source today to be under ' serious consideration as the next treasurer of the . Democratic National Committee. Some committee members already have approached him about the matter, this source said. He added that Lamb probably would accept the job as an obligation to the party. At democratic national headquarters, a spokesman said Lamb is one of several per sons being considered for the appointment Lamb is publisher of the Erie, Pa., Dispatch and owner of a number of television and radio stations, which Include WTOD in Toledo and WMAC TV In Canton-Massillon, O, Although the one -humped and two-humped camels look very different and are 'suited to different climates, there is little real anatomical differ ence between them. nil SuO LOSS Available at VALLEY FARM STORE 3935 Silrerron Road fu! 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