Jayicalhing (3iierN6,yust a Safety Lesson N V) 4 l! 4 near hit startles Salem Police Chief Clyde Warren and Fred Mantis as they Jaywalked across busy ChemekeU street Thursday morninr. The pair were engrossed in looking at a 1400 check which Man tis had just riven Chief Warren to be used by the Salem traffic safety council. The funds were made . available by a special committee of Salem Insurance Underwriters association, of which Mantis is chairman. The picture is a tar setup to point oat that safety always pays, and that the track could . have really been moving if the men had been really Jay-walkinr. A concerted effort is beta made by the traffic safety rroup, headed by Dave Hoss, to cut accidents in the Salem area by 50 per cent. (Statesman photo.) Clackamas Jersey Cattle Club to Meet A no-host meeting of the Clack amas County Jersey Cattle club has been called by President Harry F. Lane for Sunday, November 12, In the dining room at the Clack amas county fairgrounds, Canby, to acquaint club members with the facts concerning artificial insemin ation and its relationship to the breeding program of purebred Jer sey cattle.- . In order to learn of late develop ments in this practice President Lane has arranged for special speakers to explain the organiza tional aims and results achieved by the use of artificial insemination. Henry Hagg, president, and Ben Simonson, general manager of Ore gon Dairy Breeders association, will be introduced by Harold P. Ewalt, dairy specialist, Oregon State college, for an explanation of their work, while the process will be localized by Vernon Hepler, president, Marion County Dairy Breeders association, which serves the neighboring portion of Clack amas county. Recent Changes in Music Said Not Most Radical in History . Born Nov. 20, 1886, in Putnam county in Missouri, Bennett at tended public schools in Missouri and later was graduated from the University of Idaho. He also took extension work at the old Albany college and at the University of Oregon. Bennett was married Sept. 20, 1907. in Idaho to Abbie Knutson, who survives here. The couple came to Oregon shortly after their marriage and settled in Albany in 1932. Prominent in community civic affairs, Bennett was a seventh de gree member of Morning Star grange, an officer in the IOOF and an elder in the First Presbyterian church. Survivors, besides the - widow, nclude three daughters, Mrs. Mar- ory Maxwell, Tillamook; Mrs. Marion Howe, Kodiak, Alaska, and Mrs. Ruth Donley, Portlandthree brothers, Charles W. BennetCSil- etz, and Joseph R. and Burton Ben nett, both in Idaho; and a sister, Mrs. Gladys Fairbrother, in Ida ho. Funeral services will be held at p.m. Saturday from the First Presbyterian church in Albany with the Rev. Morton Booth offi ciating. Graveside services will be conducted at the Lebanon IOOF The almost complete change in music since the start of the 20th century is not the most radical in history, Dr. Willis Gates, Willam ette university professor, told the Salem Optimist club Thursday. Contemporary music is largely a reaction against over-used ideas of the 19th century and hence must be viewed in a new light, rather than compared with past music, said Gates, who is an assistant pro fessor of violin. He advised approaching modern music with the assumptions that current composers are sincere, that change is inevitable and that some of the new methods should be learned for appreciation. Some of the changes he describ ed include more pieces for small groups (chamber music) rather than for full symphonies, shorter numbers, a new type of melody not adapted to singing or whistling, new scales breaking away from traditional harmonies that had lasted for 300 years, return to poly phony or playing of two or more melodies simultaneously. . Contemporary composers have an uphill fight for performance of their works because of the "box' office appeal" of familiar 19th cen tury music, said Gates. He com pared this with the immediacy of performance in the 18th century, pointing out that Johann Bach wrote cantatas each week for the church choir he led. Reminding that time must be the judge of which composers are best, Dr. Gates listed some outstanding in the 20th century Debussy, Ra vel, Bela Bartok, Igor Stravinsky and Paul Hmdemith and stressed that for the first time American composers are ranking with the best, including Aaron Copland and Roy Harris. Because of political upheavals abroad and the attraction of Holly' wood, the UJS. has become the meeting place .of the great musi cians, said Gates. He added that improvement of the phonograph has expanded the audience for good music. Puppets are of three general kinds, those manipulated by fin gers inside the puppets, by rods from below and by strings from above. kadlDeG o o o S ; ui y ( State and Liberty - Phone 2-0912 Sizes State and Liberty Phone 2-0912 Heart Attack Fatal I if To James Bennett, Linn Schools Chief Statesman News Service ! j ALBANY, Nov. 9 James M. Bennett, 63L superintendent of schools in Linn county since 1933, died early today in Lebanon com munity hospital, after a heart attack he suffered Sunday. Bennett taught school in Linn county for 10 years prior to his election in 1932 as county superintendent His present term! was due to expire in .December or laoz Roadside Pjark Site Purchases Gets Go-Ahead PORTLAND, Nov. 9-tp-Xhe Oregon highway commission today authorized acquisition of three roadside park' sites. They are at the junction of the old Oregon trail and Starkey sec ondary highway, at Hilgard in Un ion county and at Red Bridge on the Starkey secondary highway. Projects awarded included;' Polk county Yamhill river-Salt Creek section' -Of the Dallas-Coast secondary highway near Dallas, 8.43 miles of paving. Porter W. Yett, Portland, $110,240 Douglas county Canyonville section of the Pacific highway at Canyonville, 1.85 miles of grading and paving, Roy L. Houck it Sons, Salem, $440,229. cemetery under direction of the Howe-Huston funeral home of Le The Statesman; Salem, OnqoiuTMaT.VoTVEbt Uf. IS53 3 Bodies of Wreck Victims Brought Out .... - - I : "f " - - -toy- -x r ,h z '- r )- s 'jl&i ,7 .?6Wi' - f J f .''v;-.-:ikr1;..' f:i. X ' . ' ; , . '."' - ' I , : ; ,. r. ' . : '. A '- f ..' '. I J '. f .... r .., T V.' , I BUTTE, Mont, Nov. 9 Weary workers pack ont packaged bodies from the scene of the plane crash which killed 22 near here Tuesday. The Northwest airlines plane crashed and burned Tuesday morn inr on a westbound flight to Seattle. (AP Wirephoto to the Statesman.) - County Board Gets Order For 24 Men December 5 Seventh call this year for induc tion of Marion county men was received Thursday by the selective service board ordering 24 men to report December S. Including that list and S3 due to leave next Tuesday, the draft will have taken 181 men from the coun ty since start of the Korean crisis in June. Foxes abound on the Aleutian islands. i 2 JTV:. UUMUf KnwM 7Sc - $20 . v X AW .ti: no : E 7Scw. W . 75c c 7Sc9. 75c ' - i 75c s i 4 famous pattorns In LOW, LOW COST - . . V ra uu fit ;-:r,Hfcfet SI A Mi . v? 75cw. EXQUISITE NATIONALSILVERCOM PAN Y Now you can boy fint iflverplatt ht way that's most convenient for you. Start with a complete service or buy open stock and add to It to suit your needs. Either , way, you'll find that one of these superb pattern! wlH fit perfectly Info your de sign for living. Each Is finely, detailed, lavishly sllvtrplated, beautifully finished . . . all at an astonishingly low price I UNLIMITED SERVICE GUARANTEE It H4. T Kb f W4 SOvwpMo 53 PIECE SERVICE FOR 8 $ V.50 AOOmONAl SdYICES NOT IUUSTUTIO 4 34 Piece Srvtce for 6..34 JO 73 PItct Service for 8 79 Piece Service for 8 J72A0 104 Piece Service for 12 '94.50 Gravy tetSt. : W. t. II nnnnnn K nrvvlni uum 1 I II I I M l ) Holiday Cavalcade Most Rett King Edward ; Uy-Awey For Christmas, 1.00 Weekly JEWELERS OPTOMETRISTS 00001 woo ; AT 7 Salem's Leading Credit Jewelers and SUTenmiUis i OPEN FRIDAYS TILL 9:00 P. M. 0 falMmw'i pm i mm IMIHiaUatWMMHlJ : CA4 Aet Frk St.50 o Oiillllll! Pevlity SttorC - v t .XX4 Iwr Spn, XWX v a XXV XX X tootf itt, S22.50 i BROWN'S, 184 N. liberty ; Q Hondo Corokedt Monlojt nCni Uworl g Send me' Items In quantities indicated on enclosed S Mall-O-Gram In pattern checked above. g Send me....jenrlce" In pattern indicated above. NAME........... g adoress.m;-.;.m..iIV..i! ...m....;....;....m; g CITY Cash kllUEEUIIIIIIIBSI