4 TriptdCivilizctiionFatcdto i X " 'v . r At. m . .. 4L. AJfv t "f A$,A"' ill MT. ANGEL A yotinf brown bear cot too close to civilization and was shot by a ML Ansel nursery man about two miles south of town Saturday niznt. Resident could not recall when a bear had been' observed or shot so close to town. Bernard Schiedler (left) and Leroy Amon, also of Mt. Anrel, . are shown with their U1L (Madelyn Studio-Statesman Photo.) , Bear Slain 2 Miles South Of Mt. Angel - ' Statesman News Service MT. ANGEL Bernard Schied ler who resides two miles south of here was surprised Saturday night to see a bear gallop by his door but not too surprised to grab his rifle and bag the displaced an imal. - ' Schiedler brought down - the 119-pound animal after a half mile chase in his auto down the road near his home. , The (bear was first, seen about 6:30 pjn. by Mrs.. Leroy Aman of ML Angel, who with her husband, was visiting at the Schiedler home on Gilles Road. The animal came from the stubblefield across the road, across the Scheidler gar den, beside the house and leaped the fence. Schiedler and Aman pursued by auto and treed the animal after a 20 - mile - an - hour chase and : brought it down with shots from a .22 caliber rifle. Gerard Pleads Innocent in : George E. Gerard, Los Angeles, pleaded innocent , Monday to a charge that he took 4120 from a Salem man to bet on the State Fair horse races last Friday, but failed to bet or return. Preliminary examination was set for Sept. 17 in Marion County District Court on the charge of lar ceny, in which the complainant was Delwin Finley, 162 N. Com mercial St Charges were dismis sed on the district attorney's mo tion as to two other men who had allegedly been involved. Gerard was held in jail in lieu of $500 bail, reduced from $1,500. . - j Preliminary examination was waived by Joyce Elaine Franske, Portland, charged with, larceny of a Salem car after her arrest here last week with Ivan David Ryan, by the FBI. She was bound over to grand jury. Ryan is in custody of the U. S. marshal at Portland. Lewis Frank Tasler, Salem Route 4, Box 618, moved for dis missal of the charge facing him of threatening commission of a felony. The motion was taken un der advisement by the judge, and Tasler was m released on his own recognizance. Rolling tire Results in Suit ' ' Injuries allegedly sustained when a truck's spare tire rolled onto another vehicle resulted in a $3,257 damage suit filed Monday in Marioun County Circuit Court. W. A. Edwards sued Lloyd M. Bill and Derald C. Brimm, owners of the truck, for $3,200 general damages and $57 for medical treatment. He alleged 'that the tire rolled from the truck onto his car; as he started to pass it last June 4 near Hemlock in Tillamook County.- Enrollment AtChemawa School Jumps More than 500 students al most 100 more than last year were on hand for opening , day Monday at the Chemawa Indian School. . t One hundred additional stu dents, including 50 Navajos, are expected to arrive later this week at the federal institution, located several miles north of Salem. Superintendent Martin Holm, who will address the students at an all-school assembly Thursday afternoon, said total enrollment at Chemawa this school year will be about 625. - Monday 215 students registered in the high school division, which wil take up classes today. Classes started Monday morning for 105 children in the grade school de partment and for 201 Navajos. who are .instructed in a special teaching program. . Student , will be guests of the school employes at a welcoming dance-party Friday night In the gym, according to Principal Mrs. Nell Branon. P meter's refer u - 441 COURT. GIVES GREEN STAMPS nff J Tiff iviost Marion County S cho Start CI asses- Classrooms beckoned about half Of the mid-Willamette Valley school children Monday morning with the other half due to begin studied next week. J ! Most major schools in 'Marion County joined with the sprawl ing Salem School district in open ing their doors Monday. Among tnose scheduling classes for the first time were Woodburn. Ger- vais, Silverton, Cascade Union, Stayton, North Marion and Keizer, according, u we Marion County Superintendent's office. Twenty-four -Marion Countv districts had listed Monday start ing dates with , the county school office out of then total 58 operat ing. Among those with later start ing dates are Jefferson, changed to Sept 121 Mt Angel and Victor Point Sept 15 and St Paul on Sept 10. i It .A teacher's institute '. scheduled for Sept 15j and 16 at Oregon Col lege of Education has delayed the start of most grade and high schools in Polk, Benton, Lincoln and Linn Counties. With few ex ceptions, schools in Polk County will await the end of the institute to hold classes on September 17. All Elementary teachers of Ben ton and Polk Counties and high school teachers of Benton, i Linn, Lincoln and Polk Counties will gather at OCE Monday, for the two-day institute which will fea- Permits Issued For 3 Homes . "Construction of three new dwellings, by M. C. Kanz at 2470 Mountain View Dr., $12,000; by George Sanders at 672 Wild Wind Dr, $8,000, and by A. L. Strayer at 555 Locust St, $8,800, were in cluded Monday in building per mits issued by the - Salem city engineer. . . Also at the engineer's office were permits issued to Walter Zosell, alter store at 335 N. High St, $250; H. J. Eisner, repair dwelling, 555 Union St, $300; Mrs. Jessie Gwin, repair dwelling, 2479 Walker St, $50, and Russell Shaf er alter dwelling, 1045 Cedar Way, $450. r " J Almost all new-born babies in the white races have blue eyes, al though babies in some of the col ored races have eyes of other col ors at. birth. ture addresses by Dr. H. E. Cham berlain, i consulting psychiatrist from Sacramento, Calif., and Dr. William C. Jones, dean of admini stration at the University of Ore gon. , .'. . Husbands! Wives! Want nen Pep and Vim? Ttxmnad el roupta wn tut, wotd-oui. bauncd aoMjr tecrnio body Ucki Iron. For new vtm. vtuuiti. try OMm Toale Ttblcu. Supplte Iroa ton. loo. mmy owd for pep; aupplemeiitary Iom TltUDlo Bi. TrlaJ CM com lltttc. Or SAVE MONEY tet recutar 11.10 tttt ni, g. ret Ui Mmct WTtoct e Koocy-wviiit "Ecooomy" Mm. At all drue stores everywhere ... In Salem, at Fred Meyers' and Pay-Less. -.V Tta Stertwman. Salem. Onqan; Tuwdar Septinbtr 9, ZZ&n IrilliiQJBEl flfta LLEriTii llJilDIlflir 1 Guirmittf You Balitr Baking vVy;Vv0,-,rout rs V ZJi y-' ; fy i'r ttaryi tW. tW Only one . ia-a f these Top OT a " . ..... Mll no . . and Tney at THREE-BURNER APARTMENT RANGE 9P 1951 ModtL Rtg. 149.50 'Cempltl. with PlstalU 110-VOLT PORTAtll CLOTHES DRYER Realty nica for Baby's clothes. Plugs In any outlet. Reg. 129.50. ;C0 K 36" YOUNOSTQWN . ( BASE CADItlET ' ; With Formica Top Two Drawers Roomy Storigt Space. Reg. 102.50. ' L50 SUflht Freight Damago. liPA CRANE CABINET SINK 72" Deluxe Kitchen Queen With Double Sinks. Brand Newt Reg. 239.50. ' 209' YOUNGSTOWN Automatic Dishwashers I7500 New 1951 ModeL Reg. 299.95. USIO 1947 MODEL KELVINAT0R RANGE Guaranteed for 6 Months. In Very Good Condition. 352 siTVTE st. - non c? you::sstovi iotgz:3-f;:o::-2-7092 1 w """-St" A - ' ' Sine 1934, uw'tw ien expanding our tystem to bring telephone kavict to the Columbia Basin' developer and the area' new resident. When the Columbia Basin needed telephones Making a desert blossom meant building a complete, hew communications system 1. Twenty years ago, much of central Washington was sage-1 brush wasteland, virtually without telephone service. For there were only a few scattered ranchers and several villages in the area. Then came the Columbia Basin project with its plans for a huge dam' and thousands of miles of irrigation canals. Right from the beginning, one of the important "tools" needed was telephone service. And we began, even before a yard of earth was moved, to create a new telephone system in the desert We've invested hundreds of thousands of dol lars to build the new facilities in the Columbia Basin ... an investment which will mean much to the West and to the nation. For it is helping turn barren land into fine farms. f , r-- ..AT' 11 3. JIany new homes have needed telephone-service, too. And the growth has been amazingly rapid. In Ephrata," for instance, three operators handled all calls in 1942. Today, although dial equipment handles local calls, 25 operators are f needed. In Moses Lake, there were 66 telephones in 1935. To i day there are more than 2,000. The real growth is, however, ftai ahead. For just a short time ago the first irrigation water was delivered to new farms in the Basin. Eventually, this water, will reach more than a million acres. And well keep doing our best to see that the people who move there will have telephone service equal to that in the other areas we serve. 2. Highway mobile telephones have been helping con tractors and engineers build a network of canals over an area of hundreds of square miles. In 1934, we put in a private line circuit from Coulee Dam to Ephra'ta. Today the dam itself is webbed with miles and miles of telephone lines ... a nerve tystem oyer which practically all operations are controlled. And throughout the Basin area we've been building telephone offices, laying cable, installing switching equipment to make possible telephone service the region had to have to grow on. Pacific Telephone ' si'X i Your telephone i is one of today's best bargains Throughout the West, the Columbia Basin telephone story has been told in hundreds of rapidly growing communities. And, fast as the West's growth has been, the telephone has grown at an even faster rate . . . twice as fast in the territory we serve. For at today's prices, the telephone is so economical more people can aSord it ... so useful, more people' want it. t i i r. . i a I (-V t i t . i- i - . . . A J j i 1"- f. J . . t ,. ! f ' j r .r -