THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon Friday. February 19. 1954 Page 20 CRIPPLED INDIAN BOY CENTER OF CONTROVERSY J. y-;i F7 ; ? i p 1 Ma c "hi is the nine-vcar-oju riijiJli'U Indian buy naiuuii iiamu bout whom thero has been arguments as to whether he is a "wolf boy," with medical and psycnoiogical men divided in their views. At left is a closeup of the youngster who has a double set of teeth in uper jaw, and cnppieo nanus. Len ter, he is assisted in efforts to teach him to walk. At right, he drinks by licking it with his tongue. (AP Wirephoto) West Germany Says Reds Showed Intentions in Parley BONN, Germany tfl - The West German government said Friday the Soviet Union showed in trie Berlin conference that it intends to become "the solely dominating power on the European continent. In a statement bitterly criticiz ing the proposals advanced in Ber lin by Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov for settling the Ger man question, the government said: "The (West German) federal eovernment, together with the German people In the federal re public and in the East Zone, is a unit in deploring ine resuu oi me Berlin big four conference. Washington State Issue WASHINGTON HI - A Power Commission examiner plans to rule early next week on whether Wash ington State's case will be thrown out of the Hells Canyon hearing. Examiner William J. Costcllo expects to rule Tuesday "or very soon thereafter" on a motion to strike the testimony of Holland Houston, Washington's lone wit ness at the hearing on Idaho Pow er Co.'s applications to build three dams in the Snake River between Idaho and Oregon. Costello gave this notice late Thursday when he ordered a four day recess in the hearing. Mrs. Evelyn Cooper, attorney for groups favoring construction of the federal Hells Canyon Dam near one of Idaho Power s pro posed sites, moved last December to strike Houston's testimony on (rounds it failed to support Wash ington's intervention petition and he did not qualify as an expert witness. Houston, power adviser to the Washington governor, testified against the proposed federal dam. The Soviet Union has blocked the reintroduction of freedom in her occupation area and has therewith blocked the reunification of Germany in peace and freedom., "The Soviet Union has made it clear that she wants to control Germany as a country with im paired rights. The plans and pro posals of the Soviet government in Berlin have taken away the veil from her resolution to make the Soviet Union the solely dominat ing power on the European conti nent." The statement from Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's government added: In the name of all Germans for whom reunification in peace and freedom is the utmost aim of all their labor, the federal gov ernment wants to express its grat itude for the actions of the foreign ministers of the three Western powers in Berlin." The government statement came after a special cabinet meeting summoned by Adenauer to map a dynamic campaign to speed the unification of West Europe. Offi cial sources pictured Adenauer as believing that Russia's position has created a solid opportunity for final approval of EDC. DRIVER FINED 150 SWEET HOME Wayne Donald Harper, 19 years, was fined $50 on a charge of reckless driving iter pleading guilty in Municipal court this week. Longer Holds Secret Meeting WASHINGTON HI - Sen. Lan eer (R-ND) said Friday his dis pleasure with the administration's i handling of patronage in flis state had no connection with the Senate Judiciary Committee's month-old consideration of Chief Justice Earl Warren's nomination. Warren, former Republican gov ernor of California, was nominated by President Eisenhower on Jan. II for the nation's highest judicial office. He already is serving on the Supreme Court under a recess appointment made last fall while Congress was in adjournment. No senator has announced In tention of voting against Warren's confirmation. It is taken for grant ed the Senate will act favorably after preliminaries are completed. Lancer called a closed meeting of a Judiciary subcommittee late Friday for further consideration of Warren's nomination. Langer is chairman of the subcommittee as well as the full committee. He said he didn't know whether the subcommittee would act on the appointment, but he told news men that "I want to get rid of it as quickly as possible." Male eels remain in the mouths of rivers near the sea, but fe males often travel to the head waters of streams, sometimes even making overland journeys, returning to the river mouth at breeding season, and thence to the Sargasso Sea. Wind ond Rain In Many Areas By THF, ASSOCIATED PRESS Wet and windy weather was the outlook lor most ot the midconti ncnt and northwestern areas Fri day. Mild and fair weather pre vailed in the eastern quarter of the country. A rain storm with strong winds swept the Southern Plains States and Southeastern Rocky Mountain region. Winds with gusts of more than SO miles an hour swept the storm sections. Brisk winds also 1953 Tax Topics No. 10 (Income Tax Form, 1040A) This is the simplest return of the three types provided in an effort to fit the income tax returns to the differing needs of the more than 55 million persons who must file them. If you file this form you do not need to figure your own tax. From your answers to the questions, the District Director of Internal Revenue will fig ure your tax for you, and send you a bill or a rejund. You may use the Employee's Op tional Income Tax Return (Form 1040A) if your total income was less than $5,000 and consisted entirely of wages reported on Withholding State ments (Form V-2), or of such wages and not more than $100 total of other wages, dividends, and interest, all of which must be entered on the tax return. You may not use Form 1040A but must file your return on Form 1040 if (1) you had any ' income from other sources, such as annuities, rents, roy alties, a business or profes sion, farming, transactions in securities or other property, partnerships, estates, and trusts, or (2) you claim the status of unmarried head of a household, or (3) you wish to deduct travel or reimbursed expenses from your wages. Your District Director of In ternal Revenue will provide you wtih forms and answer your questions. His address is 201 P.O. Building, Salem, Ore gon. His telephone number is 3-8262. Indochina Reds Shoot up Mart HANOI. Indochina W) Vietminh commando troops, disguised as peasants, have entered a busy market place in a Catholic vil lage in the southeastern part of the Red River delta, and killed at least 20 of the Vietnamese resi dents. - . Firing rifles and pistols and hurling grenades into defenseless crowds, the Communist-led Viet minh forced nearly 2,000 Vietna mese to flee screaming from the village to seek hiding places in the adjoining rice fields. The commandos attacked be tween 9 a.m. and noon Feb. 12. Five hundred persons are reported missing and many of them are feared to be dead. But spot investigators said Thursday there was no way of telling how many ot these would eventually return to the village of Than Thuong. This village is five miles southeast of Thai Binh, which in turn is 55 miles south- cast of Hanoi. Drizzle or rain showers reported in Texas and the Gulf while snow was general over the Eastern Rockies. Fairly heavy rain fell along the coasts of Oregon and Washington. Coldest spot early Friday was were reported over most of the West Yellowstone, Wyo., with a Midwest with showers in prospect reading of 4 above. At the same by Friday night. time it was 72 in Miami, Fla. Otten, Well Known ist, Dies SEASIDE (UP)-Gcorge Otten, Internationally known horticultur ist, died here yesterday. Otten was born at Bremen, Ger many, and came to this country in IBM. He was credited with revolu tionizing horticulture in olive groves of California. He also was n authority on begonias. At one time he was In charge of the royal botanical gardens of King Ludwig in Germany. Save with a14 Stu (ielieb AN EYE FULL -MIS it mwmmmtm A. JtJtk Curvaceous Marilyn Monroe, wearing a low cut cocktail dress, display her talents to Marines in first show of her four-day Korean tour. Cheers, whistles and popping eyes greeted the film star as more than 30,000 service men crowd ed into the first three shows. At lower right an American MP takes Marilyn's picture. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Tokyo) THE PEERLESS BAKERY Bakers for her Majesty the Housewife Green Stomps 170 N. Commercial Wbiu i'ltwkll Hm and attorn whwl dtm najiinnkl all o.Ub t tir GET AHEAD OF THE PARADE... 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New 7.5 to 1 high compres sion in both Champion and Commander V-8 engines . . . enormous all-around visibility ... the Studebaker "Miracle Ride" ... All 1954 Studebakers offer you at extra cost Power Steering and Automatic Drive or Overdrive. Read what owners say about Studebaker gas economy "My Stiult-lwkrr li.-in traveled .vj.iios mili-a nnd used 'J.'J'JO gallon oi gas 1.7 miles per gallon for overall driv ing sum mem ml winter average, higliwny speed ,ri0 to fid." "For the past 2i years 1 hnvedrivenallmakrs of cars hot nev er have I driven anything in compn re with tho Studehakcr. It is truly a big ear in eomt'ort nnd n small ear in economy." "Tim gas mileage vvas pieellent. The riding comlort was beyond words. I came horns ns rested ns though I v had driven only n lew miles instead ot' tv',0." 'LAST MAN OUT' T www . . .. - .gSSsasa Operation Big Switch came to a belated end at Travis Air Force Base, Fairfield, Calif., when the "last man out," Cpl. Donald Wakehouse of Woodbine.a., arrived aboard a C-97 hos pital plane. Here, Warehouse tells the press he is "awfully anxious" to get home to his wife, as Flight Nurse Peggy L. Berkheimer looks on. (UP Telephoto) Deelz Sues Wm.Wiedel PORTLAND W) A slander suit for 110,500 damages from the state milk marketing administrator was filed here Thursday by Klmer Deetz, the Canby dairyman who is fighting state milk control. The circuit court suit accused the administrator, William W. Weidel, of making untrue and damaging statements against Deetz in a speech before a dairy group at Al bany, Feb. 9. The complaint quoted Weidel as saying Deetz could not get a li cense to sell milk until he "cleans up his establishment," and that Deetz is "being used by powerful interests in the battle to abolish Oregon's milk control laws." Deetz, who has' beeri selling milk in gallon jugs at his farm to cash-and-carry customers, contends that state control of milk marketing is illegal. Col. Swifzer fo Be On Campus Monday Col. Byron R. Swilzer. AFROTC liaison officer for the northwest ern states, will arrive on the Wil lamette University campus Mon day, it was disclosed today by Lt. Col. Norman W. Todd, uni versity AFROTC commandant. With headquarters at Air uni versity in Montgomery, Ala., Col onel Switzer is currently making a tour of Air Force college units in Oregon and Washington.- A luncheon meeting with Col onel Switzer will be held at Bax ter Hall Monday noon. In attend ance will be President G. Herb ert Smith, Dr. Robert Fenix, Dean Mark Hatfield, Ted Ogdahl, Dr. Howard Runkeli, Lt. Col. Norman Todd, Maj. Gilbert Charters, Maj. John Thompson, Capt. Theodore Velde and Capt. William Kirkman. A test pilot in research and de velopment in 1917-18, Col. Switzer was chairman of the Joint Intelli gence Collection Agency in North Africa, Sicily and Italy during World War II. Following the war he was attached to the embassy in Rome. Speech Classes Open To Parochial Schools PORTLAND Wl Portland pub lic schools must open their special speech therapy classes to parochial school students, a circuit judge de cided Ticre Thursday. The fact that students attend a parochial school is "not an indul gence on the part of government, but rather fruitful protection of the free intellectual development of its society. The obligation of the state to the private school child is in no sense abdicated," Judge Alfred P. Dobson said. Attorneys for a Catholic school student brought the case to court after the public school board had ruled that students from parochial schools could not be admitted to the special classes. Honor Guest List Prepared Mrs. Mabel A. Lockwood, 36B North Liberty, past national president of the American War Mothers, will be one of the dis tinguished guests honored at the annual meeting and banquet of the Salem Federation of Patri otic Orders at Veterans of For eign Wars hall, 630 Hood street, Wednesday, Feb. 24, at 6:30 p.m. Mrs. Lockwood is a' charter member of the Salem chapter No. 1 and has been an active member since 1917. She is a past state president and served as president of the local chapter in 1929. Others to receive special hon ors at the banquet are Mrs. Mol lie Jane Alderman, Mrs. Fannie Fisher and Mrs. Amy Ellis, wid ows of Civil War veterans and long time residents of Salem. Recognition of all presidents, regents and commanders of the 28 member organizations of the federation will be given and a special honor will be for all past presidents of the Salem Federa tion of Patriotic Orders. Past presidents and the year they served are 1930-1931, G. A. Stover (deceased) 1932, L. C. McShane (deceased); 1933, Irl McSherry (deceased); 1934, Mrs. Eulena Bales (deceased); 1935, L. Mickelson (deceased); 193B King Bartlett (deceased); 1937, William Blivcn; 1938-1939, Glenn Adams; 1940, Herman Lafke (deceased); 1941, B.'E. (Kelly) Owens; 1942-1943, O. E. (Mose) Palmateer; 1944, Luther D. Cook; 1945, Judge Rex. Kimmcll; 1946, Paul Hendricks; 1947, A. L. Strayer: 1948, A. D. Appcrson; 1949. Donald J. Madison; 1950, M. E. Clemens; 1951, Robert Holwegcr; 1952, Dr. Roy Sco field1 and 1953, James Callaway. The banquet is under the di rection of the auxiliary of Vet erans of Foreign Wars No. 661 and any profit made is used by the auxiliary tor rehabilitation Limbless Trees Seen in Future REDDING, Calif, tfl - A forest research official predicts that within 50 years trees will be grown in a third of the time it takes now, and that they'll be tall, straight and limbless. Leslie J. Carr of Sacramento, Calif., president of the Forest Products Research Society, pre dicted woodsmen will carry hypo dermic needles instead of axes, helping the trees along. Speaking before the Sirrra-Cas-cade Logging Conference, Cnrr predicted trees, stained to decor ator colors while still standing, would be lifted roots and all by giant machines and transport ed to mills where every splinter would be put to use. Atomic factories would use pow erful beams of radiation instead of saws to cut the lumber. "It may sound fantastic," Carr told some 1.000 lumbermen of Northern California and Southern Oregon, "but it is based on de velopments already in use and on the thinking of some of the best men in the industry who are look ing far into the future." EX JUDGE DIES PROTLAND, (UP) Julius Colin, 67, former judge of the Multnomah county district court, died last night after a long illness. and Americanization projects. 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