The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 16, 1994, Page 10, Image 10

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    PAGE TEN
) ' OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon. Wednesday Morning. January IS, 1948
Salem Man is j
Missing After!
Plane Crashes
, ' i '
t Floyd Richard Mukrone, boats
wains mat 1c, has been missing
ninre the sinking of a plane And
personnel Jan. , 1946. This in
formation was received by his
mother. Mrs. Mary Cecilia Mul
crone, 872 Highland ave., from
Vice Admiral Benfeld, chief of
personnel.
Mulcrone is one of four sons of
Mrs. Mulcrone who were in mili
tary sen ice. Three others have
been discharged. Jim, Eldon and
Lloyd, the latter a twin of Floyd.
Ed, another son, is now in Bend,
and there are six sisters, Eva,
Eleanor and Ernestine of Salem:
Konubt'11 and lone of Portland and
Patricia of San 'Fraiicisco.
Mulcrone is 27 years old and has
been in the navy three years. Re-crntly-he
has been stationed at
Majuro airstrip,, in the Marshalls.
Two iSalcin Men Moved
To NATS Squadron 12
HONOLULU, T.I I. Two Sa
lem, Ore . veteran., Robert Jun
iMing. Y 2c. 1487 Broadway arid
Ralph E: Rutherford, route 7.
have been transferred to squad
ron 12 of the naval air transport
service at John Rodgers field
here.
Air transport squadron 12 han
dles administration and .aircraft
maintenance fpr other NATS
network of air bases, extending
from 'Honolulu i north to Midway,
'west to Eniwejtok and south to
Guadalcanal. !
Young Neuner Takes
(.oniiiiisioii Position
George W. Neuner, who served
as assistant attorney general un
der his father here prior to enter
ing the nayy more than two years
ago, has accepted a position as at
torney for the slate highway com
mission urtd?r J. M. Devers, in
charge of the commission's legal
division.
Neuner will assume his new
duties following his release from
the navy, probably in February.
He is now an officer on the battle
ship Saratoga, and recently re
ceived a substantial promotion.
51. '
r -
' . Ns ' i
' . f ' V. '; S " i
m. ..... f , -
Floyd Eiehard Mulcrone, BM 1c.
son of Mrs. Mary Cecilia Mul
crone, 872 Highland ave., has
.been reported missing since the
sinking of his plane Jan. . 1946,
Parents Visit Robert
Jones While Ship is in
San Francisco Harbor
26 Inducted in
Sigina Lambda
Honor Society
s
Twenty-six Salem - high stu
dents with high scholastic stand
ing were inducted into Sigma
Lambda chapter, national honor
society in the school auditorium
Tuesday night. The ceremony
was conducted by Jim Miller,
president; Barbaia Upjohn, secfe
iary; BUI Merriam, Barbara Sun
det, Bill Ready and Harriett
Huston. Joe Brazie played a piano
solo. - '
Dean Ellis, Salem attorney, a
membef of the local chapter of
the national honor society when
a high school senior, gave the ad
dress.
The new members, their par
ents and friends were guests at
a reception following the candle
light service.
Those inducted into member
Ship: ..: j : . ;
George Adams, Pat Agee, Glen
nis Allen, Harlow Ankeny, Naijcy
Buren, Lois Burris, Jane Carson,
Dale Cleaver, Carolyn Davis, Ra-
mona Evans, Paul Hale, Bernice
Isham,! Craig Kuhns,' Shirley
LiudahJ. Al Laue, Dan McCall,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles I Jones,
1048 N. 5th st. and Miss Mavis
i ium ntr or Tsni'in ci iif i rpiurneu
Kr,m K..nHv n-rnmf from San I Jerry iMcCormack, Bob Mtye,
Francisco, where they visited i Pat McNamara, Patricia Pearson,
three davs with Robert L. Jones.! Mary Elizabeth Reinhart, Violet
S 2c. who had just returned from Richards, Cole Stephens, Ma rga
the south Pacific.
Phillip Jaskoskl. Jr., lias ar
rived in Salem following his re
cerft db charge from the U. S. navy
at Bremerton, Wash., with the rate
of chief gunner's mate. He is liv
ing at the home of his parents,
Mr. and- Mrs. Phillip Jiiskoski,
1960 S. Cornmercial st.
Harold Say Gels
Vice Presidency
Of Tourist Group
BUTTE, Mont., Jan. 1S-0P)-Max
Dean, Butte, Mont., hotel
man, was elected president of the
Pacific Northwest Tourist associ
ation today.
The 76 delegates from seven
western states and three Cana
dian provinces adopted a $12,000
budget to advertise the north
west in 1946 and announced that
an expanded program for 1947
called for the expenditure of
$76,400. .
Named a vice president of the
association was Harold B. Say,
Salem, Ore.
Jones enlisted in the navy last
April and sailed for Pearl Har
bor in September- on the USS
Maryland. He. played the trom
bone in the ship's baud en route.
At Pearl Harbor he transferred
to an army 'hospital ship and
played in -the ship's orchestra,
and was transferred to an LSM
and has been a member of that
crew since. He also visited Japan,
the Philippines, Saipan, Guam
and other south Pacific islands.
His ship is now in drydock at
San Francisco for the repair of a
leak developed en route home. .
After the hip is repaired it
will go via the Panama Canal to
Charleston, where it will be de
commissioned. Jones does not
know what his duties will be af
ter the decommissioning of his
ship, but has hopes of getting as
signed to a transport or carrier.
The travellers report the roads
to San Francisco bad because of
the recent high water and the
heHvy snow in southern Oregon
and northern California. They
were forced to return to Ashland
after getting within seven or
eight miles of the California line
to get chains tQ cross the f now
covered mountains. 'The return
trip was made by the coast route
and no snow was encountered.
ret Simpson, Martha Steuslofi
and Doris Walser.
1
Sheep Breeders 1
Hit Free Trade
Produce Policy "
CORVALLIS, Jan. 15-Kp-
positioi to a free trade policy on
farm products has been expressed
by a new Willamette Valley Pure
bred Sheep Breeders association
Thei I group was formed to aid
marketing and improve stock and
has asked the state department
of agriculture to continue issuing
health certificates for livestock
sent out of state.
Gene Hubbard, Corvallis, was
elected president of the assocl
ation; Ronald Hogg, Salem, Vice
president; S. A. Jackson, Benton
county, agent, secretary-treasurer;
Chauncy Hubbard, Junction
City, Q. M. Nelson, Corvaltis, El
don Riddle, Monmouth, Charles
Evans land Claude Steusloff, Sa
lem, directors.
The I association will sponsor
the Willamette valley ram sale at
Albany.
PEARL HARBOR, T.II. Cpl.
Donald Salchenbcrg of Salem,
Ore. is .one of 5000 high-point;
army veterans whom the navy
has returned to the states for dis
charge aboard the USS Admiral
Hugh Rodman. This ship left
Nagoya, Japan, December 22,
and was scheduled to arrive in
Seattle about January 3.
Compl
Brake Service
-, fc - - air.
W offer you a good Job at
a fair price. No cnaxgt ior
an inspeitton. ri
S. P. Motors
240 R. ntrh
Ph. 21534
FRIDAY NIGHT!
AT 7:30
WE'LL BE SEEING YOU
.ill.
! B.
(SEE TOMORROWS PAPER)
THE OLD JUDGE SAYS...
ART: 'Saw you at. the movies last night.
Judge. That was quite a weekend that alco
holic went through, wasn't it?"
OLD JUDGE: "Sure was, but I'm afraid
most peoplb won t really understand it"
ART: "What do you mean, Judge?
OLD JUD6E:"&mfAy this. That poorxhap
was really a sick man... not just a drunk.
Studies by famous psychiatrists and the
medical profession show that alcoholism is
not cautid by a craving for alcohol . . . it is
usually the result of some deep-rooted social,
physical or emotional condition. If that fel
low had not turned to alcohol for escape,
he would have turned to something else"
ART: "Are there many that get in that
condition. Judge?" f
OLD JUDGE: "Fortunately not. Art. Sci
entists at a great university have stated that
approximately 35 of the people wo drink
do 6o sensibly. Only 5 are immoderate at
times. In that 5 is the small number known
as alcoholics. And the beverage distilling in
dustry which does not want a single person
to use its prodtict immodeifately, is cooper
ating fully in the solution of this problem."
Tkil adrertiumtta ifn$OftJ by Cvnftitnet Atetkolit Jrraf Injutlrttl, Int, .
'- j' i ' ' .
to faildi for HefseM...,.
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his little girl Is free to fend for herself! Free to face ft
multitude of problems.
Her problems are the world's problems. Let's face theou
JJL For instance let's face the (Us per at need for clothing aou?
in Europe and Asia.
Goal of the Victory Clothing Collection is 100,000,000 garments,
plus shoes and bedding. If your contribution seems negligible, bear
this in mind: Everyl garment you give meant one more human being
saved from cold or sickness or possibly death.
About 25,000,000 people overseas received clothing collected
from Americans last spring. But for every person clothed so far, a
dozen more remain virtually threadbare. Your spare clothing will
be distributed free, without discrimination, to victims of Nazi and
Jap oppression in Europe, the Philippines, and the Far East.
In 'most any town or city overseas there is someone who can
translate English. You can help build international friendship by
writing a simple, friendly letter to pin to the clothing you contribute.
Dig into your attics, trunks, and closets today. Dig out all the
clothing you can spare. Take it to your local collection depot now.
What YOU Can Do!
Dig Out Ywir Spare Clothing TODAYJ
V overcocts
if topcoats
V twits
v lackori
V ports.
V
shoos
drosses
skirts
gtovos
cops
swootors
V robot
V undorwoof
V bootfng
the more you do the better youll feel
VICTORY CLOTHES ;
COLLECTION DEPOTS
Schools, Churches, Fire Station, Safeway Storrs and
General Electric.
SCHOOL CHILDREN'S
DRIVE, JANUARY 17-18
Children to brlnr clothe to school on these dates.
CITY WIDE HOUSE PICKUP
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
Victory
for Overseas Relief
HENRY J. KAISER,
National Chairman
This advertisement was prepared by the Advertising Council for the Victory Clothing Collection, and is sponsored by
;4 '