. - i ' "A the Multnomah county circuit court which swarded Merton . C Dunning a , $20,000 Judgment gainst the Northwestern Elec tric company. Dunning alleged he was injured when his pickup truck collided with a power pole Which had fallen across a highway east of the Vancouver, Wash clt .limits. i , .---4' $ Tho Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Wocfaoeday. Nov. 17, 1948 of Grain Co-operatives, who made the prediction, also said a wheat export record might be set this year. James Hill, Jr., Pendleton, was re-elected president; R. D. Bar ker, Hood River, vice president; Paul Carpenter, Corvallis, secre tary; Mary Hothouse Corvallis, assistant secretary. Directors named included: Pe ter Zimmerman, Yamhill; R. A Duncan, Dundee; Frank Hettwer, Mt. Angel; E. A. McCornack, Eu gene; F. M. Smith, Stayton: and state heads of three farm organi zations Morton Tompkins, grange; R. E, Jones, farmers un ion; Lowell Steen, farm bureau. rv The Greenhcad mallard duck Is the most plentiful and best known of all American waterfowl. vV Tele-fun by Warren Goodrich 57 1 Uj. M0 Robert Ingle President of 20-30 Club ) V Vi MMMMMJMf " -llll II - -11 IB l f fiiilMM "r j.;. ':. . ' '. j:.v. , . i .tJt. i-'v,-t-i'..i.: T-.Xj; - A J 'V :" ;-. v-::-: :fi: -: T"' . '.;r-r --sJ: ryi."."w. " ii mi i n 1 1 i .in. i '!.'( I ( . ' ' ' " f I 7. r-tM V "Jl I CLASS IN MUSEUM. School children sketch ira red knifht at Metropolitan Msseum of Art. New York. . At Salem Schools By James Cooko Statesman School Correspondent LESLIE JUNIOR HIGH Effects of a population shift to the Pacific north-' west region were quite revealing in a survey ma do recently at Leslie junior high school. Only 181 pu- diis. 28 ter cent, ot the 4l pupus enrolled in tne v school this vear were born in Salem, the survey t&sk". ' ' i rlicrlnsMl wtiil 1 AA student 23 ner rent. urr i4 -fV"'''l born elsewhere in Oregon. A to tal of 314 pupils, just under 50 per cent, were born out of state Of this number the central states contributed 173. The neigh boring states of Washington, Cali fornia and Idaho are represented by 69 students. Thirty - seven students are from the Rocky mountain area. One pupil was born in England, another in Alaska and threo In Canada. That the migration to Oregon may have dropped off a little was Indicated by the fact that only 62 of the students enrolled havs moved to Salem within the past year. Of these 22 came from oth er points in Oregon, 22 others from western states and 13 from the midwest. ENGLEWOOD SCHOOL Three students from Mildred Randolph's fourth grade room ap peared on the KOAC radio pro gram "What's That Word" Tues day afternoon.: The students are Susan and Grant Todd and Donna Hamman. Melvin Mocobee, second grade student of Evelyn Kant, won this week's art award for being on tho honor roll for the KOAC program "Land of Make Believe." PERSONAL 109 ENVELOPES too SHEETS r- TISIFwMlWtMHHMl ISt shoots of lesiet tetfeeery wftb HofonooJ rriiytoooooo. HVflf lloWPPVW wmm wTTwfnPJ sTyMrs 1 twits Ib i Statesman Publishing Company 215 S. Commercial Phono 2-2441 Philippin B-17 Found in es;12 Crewmen Safe MANILA, Nov. 1 JP)- A Fly ing Fortress missing on s flight from New Guinea was found downed today in the north cent ral Philippines with all 12 aboard safe. Two suffered minor Injuries. A Philippine Air Lines com mercial transport saw the missing bomber ditched : just ; offshore at Little Alibi jaban island, about 150 miles southeast of Manila. A medical officer - was flbwn down in a helicopter, which lifted nine of the survivors to the town of San Andres oh the nearby coast of Bondoc peninsula; The other three were left on Alibijaban. Tho nine then were flown to Manila in a U. S- embassy plane, which will return later for the other throe. Among those brought here was Walter Sullivan,: correspondent of tho New York Times, a passen ger, who suffered broken ribs. The names of the other injured was not announced immediately. Tho Flying Fortress had boon ditched in shallow water just off tho island. Tho bomber, flying from Port Moresby, New Guinea, ran out of gasoline Monday when it encoun tered high winds 'and bad weather. The bomber managed to get off a distress message; giving its posi tion. i Co-op Officials Told Grain Exports to Last for 5 Years PORTLAND, Nov. 16 -JP- Eu rope and the orient will continue to demand American grain for at least five more years, the Oregon council of farmer co-operatives heard today. Roy F. Hondrickson, represen tative of the National Federation BOIIFIBE $10,000 If your Innocent bonfire spreads to your neighbors house, who Pays? A $10,000 COMPREHENSIVE PERSONAL LIABILITY POLICY Insure contingency to $10,000. SALEM'S GENERAL OF AMERICA AGENCY CHUCK uu t INSURANCE Oregon Largest Upstate Agency" 129 N. Commercial Salem Dial 3-9119 Salem and Coos Bay f SJ UCCTTOTHt CITTDCSK . - ... . i t . Robert Ingle was named presi dent of the Salem 20-30 club Tues day night in the organization's annual election at the Gold Arrow restaurant. Ingle replaces William Sullivan who was named sergeant-alarms. Other new officers are Don Schmidt. first vice president; Walter Kechter, second vice presi dent, and directors Robert Sand storm, Lowell Joseph, Harold Francher and Gene Malecki. Capt. R. B. Lesher, Salem Sal vation Army commander, wai featured speaker for tl.e: meeting and discussed the local juvenile delinquency problem. The club also voted to sponsor McKiniey grade school's Blue bird Junior Campfire troop and chose Malecki at delegate to the district 20-30 convention in Port land December 4 and S. 5 Local Troops Share Honors At Scout Court Boy Scouts of five Salem troops received awards and advance ments Tuesday night in the Cherry City district court of hon or at Waller hall on the Willam ette university campus. Represented were troop 3, spon sored by the Hollywood Lions club; troop 9, Capitol post 9, American Legion; troop 10, Salem Kiwanis club; troop 12. post 661, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and troop 20, Hayesville Community club. Eagle Scouts receiving bronze! palms were David Cooley, Robert Cooley and John Henning, all of troop 20, and V. W. Rhodes, troop 12. Lealand Edwards, troop 11, was presented tho Eagle award. CRUISEON SEIN E -StudenH of France, gwitirrland. Belglsm and Great BriUU leave Paris on trip down the Seine after getting together to study each others language.. N4 ' 4 et-.v ACTREJ S Pstrlcta Knlfht wears blouse In film la which sot co-starrrd with her basbsnd Cornel Wilde. i Court Upbolds Judge Page The state supreme court Tues day upheld a decision by Marion County Circuit Judge E. M. Pago in the case of E. V. Gwaltney vs the Pioneer Trust company. Page had ruled in favor of the trust company in a suit for spe cific performance of a contract between the company and Gwalt ney which was appealed to the higher court. The high court also affirmed I "Hold your toil still...! gotta hear the dial tone before I colli" -m-ra Wait for. the stead hurn- of the dial tone before you call ...your signal to begin dialing. The Pacific Telephone end Telegraph Company, i T ITALIAN LUNCH COUNTE RPtt eons of Venice gsther In St. Mark's Sqoare as a cits hall emsleye empties sack of corn for them. They wait for him each day at 2 jt Dayle Burris, Cherry City dist rict chairman, presented the high awards. j Ko oirayer or iroop was me tbno scout receiving the Life Scout award. Michael Church, Dennis Garland, Dick Hornaday, Darrel Isaccson and Ralph Oliver, of troop 12, and Bill McKinney, of troop 10, all were advanced to Star Scouts. Mothers of the boys presented tho awards. Merit awards went to George Strozut, Monty Richardson, Jack Stryffeler. George" Christopherson and Bill Loftis, all of troop 20, Bob Hewitt and Bill McKinney, both of troop 10 and Harlan Cut- shall. Ralph Oliver and V. W. Rhodes, all of troop 12. Norman Freese. vice chairman of tho Cherry City district, pre sided over the court. Court mem bers were George Strozut, Roboft Davidson, Gwyn A. Miller, Har old Dour is, Sam Randal and Ben Knight. ffl I rrp u uu 1 11W r s UUiiU u And does AmericM love its 1949 Nash Airily tef First with Cockpit Control! Tho Uniscopol Twin Bods! Girder-built Unitized Body ond Frame! Unillo-Jet Carbu retionmoro than 25 miles per gallon at average highway speed I No wonder the talk h Nash. Never before so much news in a motor car ! Inside that long, low, rakish body it more room than you've ever seen before ... a Super-Lounge, safety-designed . . . offering Twin Bed comfort at night! Around you, tho sky-wide sweep of s curved one -piece windshield. The safety of Cockpit control, with tho Uniscope. Here's the world's first car with Uniflo Jet carburetion more than 25 miles to the gallon, for the Nash "600," at average highway speed! The thrill of new riding smoothness with coil springs cushioning all four wheelsl New miracles of Nash Weather Eye Con ditioned Air! And now above all the super-safety and quietness of Girder-built Unitized Body-and-Frame construction. Pioneered by Nash the greatest advance in automo bile construction in 40 years! Don't stop at admiring a 1949 Nash Airflyte. Go down to your Nash dealer, get in, and get the whole amazing story the greatest story an automobile ever told! The Naih Airlyre for 1949 comet in two series, the Nash "600' 'and Sash Anixzssador. OMZAT CAMS SIMCE 190$ A Croaf Cr-hmllt hj a Greaf Cmpay-U mmd Srrivd by tee ilmmit DeaJex OrfmimMtitt tao Imdmstry ka tnr kmmt ) TO YOU AND TO ) YOUR. HOUSE BE FAIR; ) CHECK UP AND SEE WHAT NEEDS GERA& I l fc MOKIBY I TIHTT'T ,et oken or weak porches or alepe JJUll 1 cause injury. Repair porches and steps for safety. See as for materials. ' 1 54x10 and 54x12 V.G. Fir Stair Treads. i. 1' ' 51x4 V.O. Fir Flooring for Porches. Excellent for Truck Decks also. MAROON EViOTOS 333 Center Street, Salcni, Oregon Economical If water from your ves Is SPOILING your walls, CORRECT U with EAVES TROUGH. I 5" Galvanized t Half Bonnd Ixtnn lasting Large Capacity, Alnminnxn ! - i 'l ;! Square I . ; - - i Longer Lasting Medium Capacity Neat Appearance Downspout lo Fit COLD WEATHER comtrT your fuel bill is unreasonably high, you may be losing valuable heat thru ceilings or walls. If so you can save up to 40 of your fuel bill by insulating. Zonolile . FILL TYPE .INSULATION U.S.O. ' Rock Wool i Insulation batts Rejuvenate old, worn or cracked outside walls with Cedar Shakes Weathertight Attraetive Economical For lasting roof and walls on garagei barns outbuildings Aluminum Corrugated and 5crimp. Age lasting - fire re sisting light - insulating -. easily applied won't rust. "If you see rust, you know it's not alumin um." , . ;.: ! fcesswnuilUii,,,ini in hi i .. inai i.ul hi . mi. ' Front and Coun Phone 3-9163 tSts.