Fourteen The Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon Tuesday, August 11, 1942 Ban on Salmon Trailers Mouth Of Columbia Astoria, Ore., Aug. 11 W)- Sports fishermen, who annually troll by the hundreds in the waters at the mouth of the Col umbia river after close of the commercial season August 25 will be under strict regulation this year. Commercial fishing boats may not carry passengers, under reg ulations issued by Port Capt. M. P. Jensen of the coast guard and owners of small boats must have coast guard identification cards. If sports anglers want to try the waters from commercial boats, they must sign on as regu lar crew members and possess the proper identification papers issued by the coast guard. Boat owners may take friends on fishing trips and only the owner needs credentials. He will be held responsible for his guoits. The same is true of rentals the owner is responsl- ble for the fishermen to whom he rents. But ferries and regular passenger lines are the only commercial craft permitted to carry passengers in the defense area or to sea. Two areas at the river's mouth are closed to fishing No. 1 is from the Columbia river light ship to a line running from Point Adams to McGowan's dock; No. 2 is from John Day Point to Up per Sands lighted buoy No. 4, thence crossing light buoy No. 8, thence to Tongue Point cross ing lighted buoy No. 4, thence to Sylvia de Grasse wreck buoy, thence 81 degrees to inshore end to Hammond mill dock. Harold Duncan In Naval College Oxford, O., Aug. 11 On "ac tive duty" at college is, Otis Har old Duncan, 24, of Salem, Ore., who is now studying at the na val training school for radio men at Miami university here. He is receiving courses in ra dio theory, international . code, typewriting, receiving and send ing code, and naval communica tions procedure. Upon comple tion of the 16-week course, he will be eligible for a petty of ficer rating of radioman, third class. Duncan, who enlisted in the navy April, 1842, went through recruit training at the U. S. naval training station, San Di ego, 111. After finishing school here, he will be assigned to duty at sea, or some other naval station. Bluejackets in training here are housed in the Fisher hall dormitory on the campus which has been converted into bar racks. "" 2 4 - H 0 U R C U A R D Day and night the mock-up planes used by the air-borne command of the U. 8. Army to train men In loading and unloading real aircraft are under guard. This pic ture was made at an east coast post East Salem Families Hold Annual Picnic East Salem, Aug. 11 Members, of the Hollywood Drive Merry-Go-Round club, their families and a few friends met at Silverton park Sunday for their annual picnic dinner at noon and early evening lunch. Mrs.; Smith Cabin Scene For Club Outing Silverton The annual outing day of the Lions and Auxiliary club was held Sunday at the Abiqua cabin summer home of Dr. and Mrs. A. L. V. Smith with a no-host dinner served at 1 o'clock, and games and swim ming the progrnm during the afternoon. Present btslda I he family or the tioitj, Dr. and Mn. Smith end their dnuihter, Mtsa Marilyn Smith, were Mr. and Mra. Byron Blyce. Mr. and Mn. William Block. Mr. and Mrs. Glutton Dlckarson ana vane and Hlcnard. Mr. and Mrs. o. J. Tone. Mr. and Mm. John Wllsnn. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Price and Bobby and tnm. Air. and Mra. Dale Lamar, Mra. aeorae Imboden, Frank M. Powell and Jerry Lnko. . ., 5 4 Harold Holler, club president, was in charge of the arrange ments for the day and tables were very pretty and appropri ately decorated in wreaths of holly with small blocks of wood. Present were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hol ler and Stephen, Mr. and Mrs. E. o. Hol ler, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thomas. Mr. and Mrs, Walter Fisher and Mary Jean. Mr. ana Mrs. Lester Starr and Donna, with their Kuests, Mr. and Mrs. OeorRC Hardy, MrB. W. F. Starr, Paul Gulre, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Qlbb, Mr. and Mrs. ttaipn ijccKor and Ann. Mr. nnd Mrs. M. LaDue and Keith. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Frame, Marilyn and Oary, Edna and Hazel Munson and Mr, and Mrs, William Harney, Mrs. Helena Estudlllo o Sa lem signed her contract Satur day to teach upper grades and act as principal in Swegle school which was offered her at a spe cial meeting of the board last week, Some building and remodel ing of homes is being done in East Salem this summer. On the R. B. DeLapp acreage on Gar den road, a large barn is being ROTARIAN Fernando Carbajal (above) of Lima, Peru, one-time engineer on the Pana ma Canal, la president of Rotary International for the term end ing June J, 1943. built; on Hollywood drive, the A. A. Harms home is being re modeled and the P. Blessing house repaired. 'Scrappo' Shown on Elsinore Newsreel Motion pictures taken in Sa lem on July 30, by the Universal Film Exchange of "Scrappo" the scrap iron and steel robot in the Courthouse square, will be shown in the newsreel at the El sinore theatre from Wednesday August 12, until Saturday, Au gust 15, according to the an nouncement made by Carl Porter, manager of the theatre. These pictures were taken In Salem at the unveiling of the robot, when Senator Douglas McKay, Claude I. Sersanous, Jerrold Owen and others spoke. The pictures were air mailed at 6:00 o'clock, July 30, and arrived in New York at 10:00 o'clock the following morning and were shown in Eastern and other thea tres within twenty-four hours after the close of the unveil ing ceremony here. When you art annoyed by the imirting of dry, cracked, or peel ing lips hero's an city way to get relief. Apply gantlo Mflntholatum over the injured surface. This cool ing, soothing ointment will quickly help to reliavo the discomfort. Its medicinal ingredients will also pro mote healing of tho injured skin. 30c and 60c sizes. Japs Arriving At Minidoka Puyallup, Aug. 11 '(IP) The first contingent of Japanese tech nicians and laborers a party of 200 is expected to arrive at Minidoka, in southern Idaho, to day to prepare for the arrival of the other 7,000 who have been interned at the assembly center on the western Washington fair grounds here for three months. The remaining Japanese will be sent to Minidoka before the end of the month . and the grounds returned to the fair as sociation. At Minidoka the in ternees will remain for the dur ation, Residents at the assembly cen ter, called Camp Harmony by the colony, expressed satisfac tion at being moved because they now know where they will be for the remainder of the war. James Y, Sakamoto, former editor of an English language Japanese weekly newspaper In Seattle said "now we know that we will be settled at the Mln idkoa relocation center for the duration of the war and we can get our feet back on the ground." Wants Air Arm Made Supreme Washington, Aug. 11. U. Senator Josh Lee (D Okla.) has demanded in the senate that the army and navy be made sub ordinate to the air arm, because "air is going to win the war." "All strategy must be plan ned from the viewpoint of air power," he declared. "The army and navy should be auxiliaries, and an air man put in charge of strategy." Lee is chairman of a military affairs subcommittee investigat ing the feasibility of construct ing giant cargo and troop car rying planes. He suspended hearings of that group today pending final outcome of nego tiations between War Produc tion Board Chairman Donald M. Nelson and Henry Kaiser, west coast shipbuilder, for actual construction of such ships. Nel son on Friday announced condi tional approval of a plan for Kaiser to build 500 such planes, but there have been reports of further hitches. Stressing the value of planes, Lee said that in the battles of the Coral Sea and Midway "the navy didn't fire a single gun ex cept into our own ship, the Lexi ington." Lee also recommended coi W riers. Carrier now are easy targets and "floating torches.1 he said, because of their load . of bombs and aviation fuels, British General Killed ' London, Aug. 11 m The Daily Telegraph said today it had learned that Lieutenant General William Henry Ewart Gott, 45, one of Britain's out standing desert soldiers, was killed in action in the recent Libyan fighting. Journal Want Ads Pay Dcnn Elizabeth Bolard Crandall, assistant to the dean of womoi. at Stanford University (above), was sworn into tho women's na val reserve as a lieutenant ut the 12th naval district headquarters in San Fran cisco. 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