' Tr v. '. . w. 1st IBV'' t j ' ','. . .- , V MM. ' M0 lwi: Observer, La Grando, Ore., Trl., Dae. 76, 1958 Page 4 " Pilots Set Record For Interception Mission WASHINGTON (UPD Two Air Force pilots set a record of 1,150 miles 'per hour for. intercepting and destroying an "enemy" air craft in: a test Dec. 10 at Larson Air Force Base, Wash., it was aisciQsea;, Tuesday. ' The arrmcn, Capt. Maurice A. Shaff,-.0rbana, III..' and Capt. Bnice-t. Jones, Lodi, Calif., fly ing FI0 Star fighters, took off. intercepted and theoretically de stroyed a target 35.000 feet up and 172 v-jniles from their base in 8:59.9' minutes. , . FRIGIDAIRE WATER HEATERS v 40 GAL. .QUICK RECOVERY . ,99.95 Chrlilnill SDSf lal- Durln. Month of December For only 10 Down Buy Any FRIGID. AIRE' Appliance. : NO PAYMENTS 'TIL MARCH DOLVEN'S 108 Depot 3-3327 The performance was revealed by Gen. Curtis E. LeMay who presented the . two the General Electric trophy for significant achievement in aviation at a Na t i 0 n a I--Aeronautics Association luncheon. LeMay, Air Force vice chief of staff, said the pair took off in their all-weather interceptors in a light freezing rain' and alone a runway covered by two Inches of slush. '. -' ' ' Their average speed from dead stop to the moment they shot down the simulated target, a T33 trainer, was 1,150 miles per hour. Both men are assigned to the 53Hlh Fighter Interceptor Squad- THE . OANMOORE HOTEL , All Transient Guests. All those who come, return. Rates not high, not low. Free Garage, TV's and Ra dios'. We have a reputation for cleanliness. Reservations by LD phono refunded on request upon arrival. . 1217 SW Morrison Portland, Ore. ron at Larson. In other NAA Presentations, Capt. Walter W. Irwin received the Thompson Trophy for setting a world speed record, and Evan Evans, executive director of the National Aviation Education Coun cil, received the Frank G. Brewer Trophy for significant contribu tions to the teaching of aviation. The Irwin presentation was made by Gen. Benjamin W. Chid law, former head of the Air De fense Command. Irwin, Wenatchee, Wash., flew an F104 through a 10- minute course at an average speed of 1,404 in a test last May near' Ed wards Air Force Base, Calif. He topped the former record for an operational airplane by about 200 miles per hour.-. Experimental plane3 have flown faster, but the craft Irwin took through the speed course was a MsJ;r PROPERTY SALE OKAYED - SALEM (UPD Sale of utility property of Cottage Grove Gas Company to Cottage Grove Dis tribution Company for $30,000 has been approved by Public Utility Commissioner Howard Morgan. The buyer, an Oregon corpora lion, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Suburban Gas Service, Inc., a major distributor of liquid prop pane gas in 19 Oregon cities. standard model ready for combat use. The F104 also holds the world's altitude record of 91,249 feet. At times his F104 topped 1,500 miles per hour. -But even his low er, average speed was twice the speed of sound. Mrs. Roosevelt Denies Taking Yoga Exercises NEW YORK JPI)-Mrs. Elea nor Roosevelt says she. always has performed daily morning exercises but she denied practicing yoga while first lady. In her column "If You Ask Me" in the current issue of McCall's Magazine, Mrs. Roosevelt said novelist Fannie Hursts "exagger ated slightly" in her autobiogra phy when she said Mrs. Roosevelt performed a yoga exercise in the White House that involved stand ing on her head. "I did, and still do, exercise every morning," Mrs. Roosevelt wrote. "But I did not know they were called yoga exercises. Cer tainly not for a long time have I attempted to stand on my head, though there was a time in my life when I could accomplish that feat!" 1 ' . Use banana bread instead of regular bread for a different fla vor in French toast. Store Hours Mon.-Sah, 9:30-5:30 BETWEEPJifEAR, BAR ADKIS Penney's rings out the old with brand new special buys... timely as the year ahead! BOYS' WASHABLE ...HOODED PARKAS X, only. VJ11 'MOST WANTED STYLE ZIP-OFF HOODS KNIT TRIMS ' NYLON QUILTED CHECK THESE ITEMS AND SAVE! v' MEN'S DRESS WOOL TOPCOATS S 24 88 only. SMART STYLINGI ASST. SHADES - BROKEN SIZES !! WOMEN'S SMART 'BETTER DRESSES $5-s8-$10 Broken Sizes & Styles HUGE SAVINGS LIMITED QUANTITIESI TODDLERS' WARM SNOWSUITS Now only. S300 COTTON SHELLS WARM LINED r SIZES- 1 TO 4 ASS'T. MEN'S DRESS BELTS Broken Sizes And Shades All "Priced To Clear!. BOYS' WOOL SUBURBAN COATS All Wool In Smart New Styles Some Hooded Loden Styles. . . ASS'T. BOYS' WINTER CAPS Select From Leathers Or Wools Asst. 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TYPES, STYLES Reduced To Clear! Women's Plastic Boots only 1.33 Reduced To Clear! ONE GROUP..3!,99 ONE GR0UP?233 ONE GROUP. ?333 Holmes Seeks Official Rule : SALEM (UPD-tfov. . Robert D. Holmes has asked ah attorney general's opinions concerning the right of appointment of the next Oregon secretary of state. The opinions are expected with in a few days. The governor announced last month that he would appoint Dave O'Hara, former state elections chief, to the post. ' He said he was asking the opin ions because newspaper reports indicated a conflict between the legal advice given him and that given Gov.-elect Mark Hatfield, Hatfield believes he has the right to appoint his successor to office. Gov. Holmes posed these ques tions to the attorney general: ..Is it necessary that the incum bent secretary of state, who is the gov. - elect of Oregon resign from office before being eligible to take the oath of office as governor? ..If a resignation is required, to whom and in what manner is the resignation to be submitted? ; ..Assuming that the present sec retary of state decides to accept the position of governor to' which he has been elected, who has authority to appoint his successor as secretary of slate the incum bent governor or the gov.-elect. ; The governor said it was his desire that the question be settled "in an orderly manner and with out any disturbance of the pub lic s business. The governor claimed he had the legal right to appoint Hat field's successor. 'In order to prevent last min ute confusion, however, I consider it advisable to submit a request for formal opinions from the at torney general on these points," the governor said. Opinions of the attorney general have the effect of lay until tested in the courts. '; New Gadqet Simplifies Dressing By CAY PAULEY '". ' UPI Woman's Editor NEW YORK (UPD First it was the thorn. Then came the but ton; the safety pin and the zipper. Now, it is the cocklebiir xlosure which is helping hold us together. Some apparel manufacturers re fer to this latest gadget lor sim plification of dressing as the "zir perless zipper".-' Its" -'Arftencari maker calls it Velcro, thi man made cocklebur of nylon, i; , . Designer Pauline Trigere first called the closure to my Attention. She used it on leopard' skin' belts, adjustable to any waistline be cause no buckle was necessary. Put the belt together at any point and it stayed put. '; : But today, - it s spreading throughout the clothing industry and soon will be holding baby's diaper on. It fastens men's trou sers, ladles' raincoats, sports jack ets, children s clothes, skirts, belts, and has potential use to put together everything from brief cases to slip covers. Donald C. Webster, vice presi dent in charge of the New York office for the firm, which has headquarters in Manchester, N.H., said the fastener is the, brain child of a Swiss inventor Georges de Mestral. Mestral, on a hike, start ed wondering why cockleburs cling so tenaciously to clothing.', Seven years, ago he made the first "bur" but it wasn't until five months ago that the first patented closure was available in the Unit ed States. Now, the firm is marketing 125, 000 yards a week, expects its sales to double by summer, reports that !)5 apparel manufacturers will use It in their spring lines and hopes within a few months to have it available for the home seamstress. The firm is "as entangled with cockleburs as a ' spaniel's cars", quipped the: : DuPont company's employe magazine. Here's how the closing works; One nylon fabric strip has bristles of filament -packed 500 to 600 per square . inch; each tipped with mi croscopic, "hooks.; The matching strip is covered with-soft loops, of yarn. I'ress uieiu lugemei- miiu they cling. "! Pull apart and they separate easily as the spring hooks progres sively lose their grip. The -strips range from inch to two Inches in width. 1 "v Velcro is washable, can be:, dry cleaned, won't corrode and won t jam. Which also means it -won't be subject to all those anecdotes which for years hnvd plagucd.'the zipper. j'. ICCHearingAslced On SP Service Cut SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) A committee of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors has ap proved a resolution calling on the Interstate' Commerce Commission to hold a public hearing before letting Southern Pacific curtail its Shasta Daylight service to Port land. The Public Utilities Committee asked that the hearing be held here. The railroad has applied for permission from the ICC to cut back Shasta Daylight trains from seven to three a week storting Jan. 15. v vi j, . LEAGUE CHAIRMAN NAMED PORTLAND (UPI) L. C. (Jack), Binford, Portland attor-' ney, has been appointed as chair man of the Izaak Walton League of America's Youth Conservation Conference Committee. English Woman's Sight ' Restored By Operation ' LONDON- CUPI) : - Some people may call it coincidence but to Mrs. Florence May. 'the gift ' of sight is the miracle of Christmas all over again. '.'.. Mrs.; May of suburban Hayes be came blind1 14 years ago. Since then she has lived only with mem ories of. the-face of her husband Frank who is her age, 62, and of her married daughter Dorothy, now 39. Two operations failed to restore her sight but the third proved suc cessful and Mrs.. May removed her dark glasses at home, looked in a mirror and. cried happily at what she-saw. "Darling," she told her husband, "this is the miracle of Christmas. I've been given the most wonder ful present of all." . H , SERVICE CUT APPROVED SALEM (UPI),", Public Utility Commissioner : Howard v Morgan said that he would permit Greyhound- to reduce service- between Portland and Waldport by elimi-' nating one daily trip each way-; , The , action leaves , three daily trips in either. direction.'..., - A Friendly Tip To Our Customers YOU SAVE $3.00 by paying your Grande Ronde Television Association dues before January 1, 1959! Dues payments made prior to January 1, 1959, are S15.0O. Payments made on or after January 1 will be at the announced rate, of $18.00. Payments can be mailed or brought to the Association's office in the Observer Bulld ' Ing, Sixth and Washington, La Grande. Grande Ronde Television Assn. Iti km! 4 la Iw - 9 r y lltff.IITA.UAUt AUhftUIIV ifMftlVtf il DCJSiyJLlMGGf That's right! Practically all of yowr iniurance can be included in ON policy. Avoids duplica tion!; to vet money! Imagine the convenience . -V! ONf pollcy-ONI renewal dote-OMf premium (oa annual r budget payment U you wish) -"ONf agent. Ask ui 'fof lull . detoitt; no obligation." REYNOLDS Insurance Agency; Reynolds Bldg. CPOCTHTT) ccd cub w5T I KM The sale that has everything! Spring-fresh styling Tremendous stlection Even woven cottons that usually cost much mora for 2.79 each- misses' and half sizes 80 square percales, woven cottons, that wash beautifully, . most need little or no ironing I Around-home or around-town dresses in shirtwaist,' coat, button or lip-to-the-waist styles. Pastels, bright colors in prints, stripes, florals.-plaids, paisleys. Full-skirted, excitingly detailed. Come early for best selec tions, buy 2 terrific dresses and save I . ' . - Wards welcome your credit account! ' At