) y Demo Thinks Morse Strong Portland, Aug. 20 W) It will take an outstanding candidate to defeat Sen. Wayne Morse (R., Ore.), a democratic party spokesman admitted here today Jack Redding, director of publicity for the democratic na tional committee, here to survey the Oregon political situation, described Morse as the demo crats' most "formidable" oppon ent in the northwest. The chance of unseating Morse depends "entirely on the candi date . . . you can't beat some body with nobody," he said. He added, however, that dem ocrats have a good chance to win two of the four representa tives' seats in Oregon. Naval Training Due Month's End Salem's Naval Air Facility will in all probability not re ceive planes for reserve training . until the end of this month or later. Meanwhile, however, re serve pilots have been filing out their applications for flight or ders so they will be able to fly when planes do arrive. When here for the establish ing ceremonies for the facility Capt. A. E. Buckley, command ing officer of the Naval Air Re serve Training Unit at Seattle, stated that the planes were in Seattle to be turned over to Sa lem as soon as the Salem volun teer unit members were cleared for flying. Another delay has been en countered recently though. While the planes are available the bureau of supply and ac counts has not cleared for main tenance equipment for the planes. The planes now are be ing used for training cruises at Seattle. Of the Salem volunteer unit members 10 have already been cleared for flying by the bureau of personnel and by the chief of Naval Air Reserve training. Ap proximately 30 other aviators and ground officers have com- pleted their applications and sent them to Seattle and for the aviators a speed letter ha al ready been sent to the bureau of personnel for clearance. All of the aviators will have to have their physicals before their applications are forwarded to the chief of naval air reserve training, where flight orders are issued. The first big group of men will go to Seattle Saturday to receive their physicals, with between 15 and 20 making the trip aboard a R4D being sent here from Seattle. Two Indians Held As Arson Suspects Eureka, Calif., Aug. 20 M Firefighters battled 16 forest fires today, believed to be of in cendiary origin, in the mountains northeast of here, Six Rivers Na tional forest officials reported. Two men, Leonard E. Masten, 19, and Edgar Norton, 18, both Indians, were arrested yesterday on suspicion of arson in connec tion with the blazes. Authori ties said road blocks have been set up in the Hoopa Indian res ervation area for four other men believed responsible for the fires. Meanwhile, more than 250 men were reported on the fire lines in an attempt to control the flames. Man Fined $200 for Stabbing Pet Dog Chicago, Aug. 20 OJ.R) Victor Kinnunen, 43, was fined $200 and costs for stabbing his pet terrier, Blondie. Kinnunen told Judge Nuncio J. Bonelli he accidentally fell on the dog while holding a knife, but a witness said he stabbed the dog wilfully. Blondie was expected to re cover. Over 500,000 acres in Argen tina were planted to potatoes this year. OLD TIME DANCE Every Saturday Night Over Western Auto 259 Court St Join the crowd and have a good time Music By BEN'S ORCHESTRA PUBLIC DANCE Admission 60c, Inc. Tax Music by "URS" WOLFER and His Orchestra at the Cottonwoods Located on the Albany Lebanon Highway, 7 Miles East of Albany Dancing Every Saturday Night 9:30 to 1 A.M. Just Call Me 'Butter Ball' This action sequence shows the rescue of a little dog that somehow got himself wedged in a 3 V4 inch space between two buildings in Oakland, Calif. At left Patrolman Homer Goodman rubs the dog with melted butter obtained from a nearby restaurant, to make him slippery. (Center) Steve Rose of the SPCA is trying to pull the buttered dog out. At right Rose and Patrolman Don Fullmore with the exhausted pup after he was freed. He later licked off the but ter. (AP Wirephoto) Independence Will Penalize Hop Fiesta Rule Violators Independence Final plans for the annual Independence Hop Fiesta are being completed for the celebration August 31 to Sep tember 3, according to C. R. Lamb, president of the Hop Bowl. Marshall Powell, T-shirt chairman, announces that 45 dozen more T-shirts have arrived and stenciled shirt or a cotton shirt and blue jeans will be confined in the Fiesta hoose-gow or wire cage. The portable jail is on a trail er and will be paraded on Main street each day until the fiesta. Violators will be jailed after Saturday morning, states Powell William Darling states that street decorations will be hoisted over downtown streets this weekend. Bumper cards have been placed on several local cars and trucks and posters will be distributed about Indepen dence and surrounding towns to further advertise the fiesta The queen selection will be held August 31, at 4 o'clock on C street near Main street and any girl between the ages of S and 10 years is eligible. The contestant may wear either shorts or a bathing suit and will be judges on personality poise and appearance. The young queen will be crowned that night at 8 o'clock in the high school gymnasium at the home talent show. She will wear white and will carry a regal robe. She will also be pre sented with a jeweled wrist witch. Her four princesses will wear pastel gowns and will be Biven gold lockets. Mrs. Clara Graves is making the dresses. Thursday, September 1, the Salem Saddle club will present a 45-minute show in the Inde pendence Hop Bowl. Entrance to the Hop Bowl is being prepared for the many expected specta tors. Following the horse show will be the grand parade at 7 o'clock with a $25 grand prize and $5 for the winner of each section in the parade, states Harry Day, parade chairman. Any entry must contact either Day states that any kind of August 29, and register for the parade. Section chairmen include Paul Dodd, band; Maurice Dodson, industrial; John Pfaff, civic; E. P. Oppliger, fraternal; and H. R. Layton, comic. Day stated that any kind of entry will be accepted and it is not limited to local people. A street dance will follow the parade on C street with square dancing and old time dancing mixed in with modern, annunces. John Pfaff, dance chairman. Invitations have been sent to several towns with square dancing groups to perform ' at the dance. KNOW Your Road and Street Names Over 650 Named Streets and Roads on the New Salem Street Map Ob tainable at the Office of Mel Propp Surveyor 341 State Mail $1.00 and Receive Map by Return Mail IF YOU LIVE IN SALEM See Us for Dwelling and Household Furniture Insurance . Our policies cover broad form, including fire, lightning, windstorm, explosion, falling air craft, & motor vehicle damage. Rates in protected area. $1000. 3 Years (with Shingle Roof) $6.40 $1000. 3 Years (with comp. roof) t $5.60 SEE VS FOR QUOTATION ON YOUR NEXT POLICY .... Scellars, Foley & Rising, Inc., Agents OREGON MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. 143 8. Liberty St., Ph. 24143 j ? A, V I $s I JESs anyone not wearing either a Children will parade Friday evening at 7 o'clock in the big kiddies parade. A coupon can be obtained at any service station or the Independence Enterprise office for entry blanks and any form of float or costume may enter. First prize will be ' a bicycle second prize, a radio; third, i wagon and fourth, a tricycle. APPLE POLISHER FEELS 'Office Nuisance' Needs Understanding of Others Chicago, Aug. 20 (Pi A psychologist fixed his searching eye today on that well known phenomenon the office nuisance. The apple polisher, said Prof. A. C. Van Dusen, is that way because he feels insecure. The Northwestern university Institute of Commercial and Trade Organization Executives not to fire problem employes, but to determine why they tick off key. "Actually, it all boils down to the worker's basic needs," Van Dusen said. "Such needs are approval and recognition, a feeling of emotional security, accomplishment and contribu tion." And if somebody in the or ganization regularly causes his employer mental anquish, may be it's the fault of the boss, himself. Van Dusen urged the execu tives to consider their own atti tudes toward the office force. There ought to be an "atmos phere of approval" in every office, he declared. The boss should be quick to acknowledge a. job well done. When something is done wrong, the boss should be sure the em ploye understands why it isn't satisfactory. tie snouian t set a vague, hard-to-follow office policy. He should stand behind his sub-1 ordinates when they are right. If there's a change to be made which directly affects an in- When You Think of i LIFE Insurance Think of NEW YORK LIFE And when you think of New York Life think of Walt Wadhams SPECIAL AGENT 578 Rose St. Salem. Oregon Phone 27930 "If yea Mkt me call bi Walt" Extra Concert By Salem Band The Salem Municipal band will present another concert in Willson park Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. This concert, and another next Sunday, will be sponsored Dv the American Fed eration of Musicians through its recording fund, the same pro gram under which the 'teen-age dances are sponsored. The two Sunday concerts are in addition to the 10 already giv en during the past five weeks under city sponsorship through the city budget. For the Sunday concert Di rector Maurice Brennen an nounces the following program: The Wr-stern March Jewell Finalerom the New World Symphony Dvorak Selection from Carmen Bizet The Conqueror March Lclke Rhythms of Rio Bennett Intermission Midnight in Paris ..Conrad and Magidson March Williams Blue Danube waltz Strauss Purple Carnival March .. . . Airord INSECURE psychologist told the National dividual employe, that person should be forewarned and given an explanation.. And, Van Dusen said, sub ordinates should be given re sponsibility when they're ready for it. Egypt's housing shortage is acute. DANCE TONITE i Aumsville Pavilion Music hv Tnmmv & Kezziah and His West Coast Ramblers In Aumsville 10 Miles S E. of Salem 9:30-12:30 DST 9:30-12:30 DST That phone number is . 3-3131 FOR THE BEST Hauling Storage Fuel local Agm for VAN LINES CO. IARMER TRANSFER and STORAGE 889 No. Liberty "Our reputation is your security" vwvv Fire Hazards Are Continued Albany, Aug. 20 Linn coun ty's fire warden, Mel Crawford, said Friday that the forest fire danger for the next several weeks will be "quite critical." Weeks without any rain at all, and several months since the last major rain, combined with hot weather and fairly low humidity to make Linn county's half mil lion acres of dry forests very sus ceptible to a major fire, the war den reported. The fire that burned over 35 acres of partly cutover land on Courtney creek, near Crawfords- ville is now under control, Craw ford said. inursaay nignt tne lire pa trol extinguished another forest fire near the Willamette Nation al Lumber company mill near Foster, Crawford reported. The fire, which was started by a flying spark from the mill s re fuse burned, burned off a quar ter acre of wooded land nearby "Dry winds from the north that have been prevailing for the last week, add to the fire dan ger," the Linn warden said. "We have been riding on luck so far this summer," he added. Tate Again Mentions Approach of Deadline W. M. Tate, chairman of the Marion county ACA committee, again calls attention to the Au gust 27 deadline for requesting adjustments on 1950 wheat acre age allotments. Notices of allot ments were sent to producers August 12. "Appeals must be made in writing to the Marion county ACA, Post Office building, Sa lem. Allotments were set at 84 percent of the usual wheat acre age," Mr. Tate states. The aver age of the years 1945-1948 with adjustments for abnormal con ditions is considered "usual." Appeals should show how the allotment does not represent 84 percent of the usual production. Anyone who does not receive a notice of allotments may as sume that his allotment is zero and that he is not eligible for price support on any wheat har vested in 1950. Those who re ceive no allotment notice and can show that they raised wheat in one or more of the years 1947, 1948 or 1949 mav aoaeal for an allotment and should do so before August 27., DANCE i To the Music of Lee and the Melody Ramblers ALBANY ARMORY Every Saturday Night Admission 65c, inc. tax. Semi-Modern Tom's King Just Beyond The Liberty "Y" u- AMAZING NEW INVENTION! New Way to Restore Hearing NOTHING TO WEAR IN THE EAR! NO HEADBAND TO PRESS AGAINST HEAD! NOT A TUBE OR SECRET HEARING DEVICE! ONE DAY ONLY SENATOR HOTEL Salem, Oregon Ask for Mr. William H. Miller MONDAY, AUG. 22 ACOUSTICON-PORTLAND CO. 520 Equitable Bid. 421 S. W. 6th Ave. Be. 4552 Portland 4, Ore. Nuw low priest en tht DUC0-HEAT OIL-FIRED CONDITIONER IASY TlRMSt Niw Uw prlcct n down payment and up le 3 ytart t pay fr yur new Dlca-Hri OtU flrd Cndltlnalrl Here is real General Motors value ! The Delco-Hcat Conditioniir offers the exclusive Rotopoutr unit that combines all moving parts in one assembly rhe simplest burner mechanism of all I Gives depend Salem Heating and Sheet Metal Co. 1085 Broadwoy . Just Plane Girl Actress Jeff Donnell (above) was dub bed "Miss Air Coach of 1949". the girl pilots would most like to be air-borne with. All the fanfare was to inaugurate a new low-rate run between Los Angeles - San Francisco -Oakland by Western Airlines of California. (Acme Tele photo) Vatican Coins 700 Years Old Vatican City, Aug. 20 (P) A collection of 1899 coins, some seven centuries old, has been gathered in the grotto of the ba silica of St. Peter, where the apostle is believed to have been buried. The coins were tossed in the grotto over the centuries by pilgrims. Church authorities said the collection will be cata logued. -cool-DANCING TONITE to Wayne Stracfian's Music VFW HALL Hood and Church Sts. Enjoy the Best Dance Floor in Salem NOW SERVING CHICKEN IN-THE-BASKET With Coffee and the New Spiral French Fries HAVE YOU TRIED IT? (Home-Made Pies Baked Daily) Cole Drive-ln Closed Mondays BUT - A REVOLUTIONARY NEW DEVELOPMENT That YOU must SEE and TRY IMMEDIATELY If you are unable to come to hotel, write for information. Service and Batteries for ALL INSTRUMENTS 5 Hmn, Cltsnt ami HimiJffut tit Air tn ytur Hmtt able, economical automatic heat 1 You can be sure your Delco Heat Conditionair will be ins' " rigliv, roo we've been fa trains.! by Dc!co-Heat r. Phone or come in right away I Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., NO BUGLAR FOR FINAL CAMP State's Sole GAR Survivor Plans to Answer Last Call By BILL LOGAN Portland, Aug. 20 (U.B Theodore A. Penland, 100-year-old com mander of the Grand Army of the Republic, was sad today be cause there won't be a bugler to play taps at the GAR's last encampment. Penland is one of live surviving memDers oi tne uak who plan to answer the final roll'p call at the GAR's 83rd and final meeting at Indianapolis, August 28. "I wish there could be a bugler there to sound the final call for us," he said "But none of the remaining boys are bug lers." The old soldier said the as sembly of four survivors would take place where the original Grand Army formed under Gen John A. Logan in 1867 the Claypool hotel. Penland will have no succes sor as commander. He will head the GAR until, as he put it, "the books are closed." All told there are 17 members alive, but only five will be there He was born January 23. 1849 in Goshen. Ind., the son of a farmer. He served with the Indiana volunteers, principally on picket duties. He was on the fringe of the second battle of Bull Run in which his father was fatally wounded by a rifle ball. People were tougher then," he declared. "My father walked three miles with a hole in his belt-line before he dropped dead." Penland attributes his long life to travel, clean living and walking. He once walked 1,400 miles on the trail to California after appomattox. He enlisted at the illegal age of 16 by writing "18" on a Savings Earn Sooner at Salem Federal! . . . Money placed in your account during the first 10 days of any month, earns from the 1st of o r s i S 1' s mat monin. atari nuw q earning our current 4s 2 Vi per annum. g QSaYlnci Federally Insureds) D 1 Dance Tonite - Glen wood Ballroom Larry and His Cascade Range Riders -k A Tale of Three Suckers Went fishing with two friends on the Silctz yesterday, we spent $5.87 for gas & oil boat $2.00 one flat tire $1.00 lost 2 spinners $1.50 both of my friends took the day off from work at a cost to them in wages of $25.00 1 don t draw wages, so we'll put down $5.00 (I work cheap) total cost of the trip $40.37. We caught 4 blue backs total weight 3 ' lbs.. Those darned fish cost $11.53 per lb. figure it out for yourself. Just think, if we had have stayed home we could have invited 59 friends taken them to STEVENSON'S RES TAURANT & fed them all a full dinner of our ROYAL FISH 'n CHIPS. The moral of this story is, if you want fish, eat it at STEVENSON'S & save your money, a few trips like this one would make the down payment on a new car. I'm getting ready to sell FISH 'n CHIPS, the old English way, at the STATE FAIR be sure & see me there. My wife will run the restaurant, she says she is going to open at 6 a. m. & stay open until 2 a. m. That will give her 4 hours to sleep, which ought to be enough, she's young & can take it. So long until next week, CLAUDE. Stevenson's Restaurant 2535 Portland Road Saturday, August 20, 1949 3 scrap of paper, wedging it in his shoe and swearing he was "over 18." I was on the skirts of the crowd at the first encampe- ment in Indianapolis, and I did n't hear any of the speakers," he reflected. "This time I'm going to give a ship-launching speech that I composed during the last war." He recited it without a slip in a firm, resonant, drill-sergeant's voice. It began: "Guide this ship to victory for America . . ." The spry, bespectacled centen arian has 12 great-grandchildren and 19 great-great grandchild ren. He doesn't expect to marry again, soon. "I'm going to wait a little while . . . until I get old er," he said. "And take this down," he said. "Take this down. A Jeep will never replace an army mule. It could kick." Then he told of his trip in 1936 to Gettysburg for the un veiling of a monument, dedi cated to both the union and confederate armies. "After they lit the gas flame that will burn forever, they rounded up 800 Boy Scouts and 800 wheelchairs to trundle us off to the train. I asked my Boy Scout what it was for. "After he told me, I said, 'Get in son. Let me push you.' " $un Valley m Mad by the Bakers of Mtiter Brud" Phon. 2-9004 HI6H IN INERCY AT YOUR FAVORITE FOOl STORE t ' L Pet. 1 08 Mi 3 69 .430 77 .JJ injii L Pet. 68 .Mi i 13 .4U I 70 .407 1 15 .380 losest since n. light, . In ltage they nth- s re hold mest itage Chi- .ves feed the fty his tos- :her, lead 5-3 !ubs. im .era ipts tars per ear by red. r a lub up lay go.