Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, October 06, 1949, Page 28, Image 28

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    28 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Thursday, October ft, 1949
President Reviews Field Forces President Truman reviews
honor guard of army field forces at Pope field near Ft. Bragg,
N. C, where he attended war games staged for his benefit.
The President inspected a research center where highly se
cret radar and artillery firing devices were demonstrated for
him. (Acme Telephoto)
BANDLEADER: 'MENACE OF PACIFIC
Spade Cooley Finds
Troubles in Owning Yacht
Hollywood, Oct. 6 W) Western star Spade Cooley pulled a fast
one on the other Hollywood cowboys when he went out and
bought himself a shiny, new yacht. But as far as the coast guard's
concerned he should have stuck to his horse.
The bandleader, who admitted he wouldn't know a marlin-
spike from a doorstop, claimed
his luxurious 86-foot yawl maae
him the only cowboy ever to go
to sea.
The coast guard had a better
title for him: the "menace of the
Pacific." They wish he'd go
someplace else.
In the six weeks Cooley has
been a yachtsman he has:
Crashed Into the multi-million
dollar hyperion outfall sewer
system.
Fallen out of his dory, losing a
wristwatch and an expensive
camera.
Bashed in the side of his boat
Sunk It In Santa Monica har
bor. Hooked the sails on upside-down.
Scared the coast guard half to
death by getting lost at sea and
Ignoring their rescue signals.
Been run over by his own
yacht.
"But I'm a-glttln' the hang of
it- now," drawled the fiddle
playing sea dog. "I bought me
some books on navigation."
He said he was driving near
the harbor one day when all of
a sudden he "got a hankerin" "
to own a yacht. And he found
a bargain $16,000 reduced to
$8,000.
Since then, what with repairs
and one thing and another, Cool
ey's shoveled out another five
grand. And the coast guard'll
give you odds this isn't the end.
"Heck, this sailing's easy,"
Cooley said. "The man showed
me where the wheel was and
That's all
what button to push
I needed."
What made the other yachts
men so nervous was that Cooley
insisted on driving the darn
thing around the ocean by him
self. "I don't need a crew," he said.
"My band finishes up at the
Santa Monica pier on Saturday
nights and I Just hop into the
boat."
He was alone in the fog when
he plowed into the sewer sys
tem. But one of his musicians
was behind the wheel when the
yacht ran over him.
I was out In the dory taking
pictures and I drifted about 500
yards," Cooley explained. "The
guys tried to pick me up but
they couldn't stop the boat. They
ran right through the dory."
Another night he got lost com
ing home from Catallna Island
and sailed 20 hours before he
found Santa Monica.
"Some boat kept signalling
ine," Cooley shrugged. "But
all I could see was black spots.
I didn't know if they were land
or more water. So I just shut
my eyes and went through. It
was water, thank gosh."
Later, a harried coast guards
men told him he was signaling
the "all clear" to come on in.
"How'd I know what all that
blinking was?" Cooley said.
8 Oregon Hunters
Arrested in Nevada
Reno, Oct. 6 (P) Eight Ore
gon hunters, charged with hunt
ing deer in northern Washoe
county in closed season, posted
$230 cash bail each in justice
court yesterday.
The men, arrested Saturday at
a camp on Horse creek:
Floyd Reed, 4!), Lakeview cat
tleman, charged with killing a
deer; John Linderman, 43, Sa
lem; John Lilly, 32, Medford;
Marvin Wells, 32, Lakeview;
William Wells, 23, Lakeview;
Everett Dodson, 44, Lakeview;
Ernest Cox, 27, Medford; and
Hans Hafstetter, 57, Salem. The
charge against the last seven was
hunting out of season. The sea
son opens in Washoe county
Oct. 16.
(AdvertUtment)
More Comfort Wearing
FALSE TEETH
Her u ft Pleasant way to overcomt
plat dUcomtort. FASTEETH. an Im
proved powder, sprinkled on upper and
lower plates holds them Ilrmer o
hat they feel mors comfortable. No turn
my, tooey putty ttute or feeltni. It's al
aalln non-acld. Doe not sour. Checks
plnLfl odor" (denture breath). Get FAS
TEETH today it any drug store.
MEN'S GABARDINE & COVERT
TOPCOATS
Large Selection All Sizes
$20 - $45
TH0S. KAY WOOLEN MILL CO.
260 South 12th Street
-5Uf C Stamp of Approval
You won't find this one In any Stamp Catalogue. But if
you're looking for a whiskey you can catalogue as "per
fect".. .try 7 Crown Seagram' finest American whiskey.
3-
Sropram)
-7'-
fy .cagrams Sure
ITim'i 7 Crown. Blended Whiskey. S6.I Proof. 65H ttrein NeuttH Spirits. SMtrim-Outillers Corp., Ctirwlpr Puitdmf. N Y.
Wounded Bear
Chases Hunter
La Grande. Oct. 6 Wi A
hunter's flight from a wounded
bear and a pair of other bruin
skirmishes topped the stories
told by deer season nimrods
here today.
Marion Spencer, La Grande,
brought down a 200-pound black
bear with his .30-.40 rifle north
of Mount Emily Saturday. He
looked away for a moment, then
started walking toward the fall
en bear, 100 yards away.
Only the bear, by the time
he looked up, wasn't fallen; it
was bounding toward him.
Spencer took to his heels,
glanced over his shoulder and
discovered he was running a los
ing race. So he wheeled, took
aim and with the bear an esti
mated 30 feet away, fired again.
That ended it.
Guy Spence didn't try to top
that one, but told of bagging a
300-pound black bear from 200
yards with a .30- 30. The ani
mal, wounded, rolled down be
hind a log and when Spence
arrived at the scene his dog was
trying to battle the wounded
bear. Spence shot it again, and
the bear got to its feet. A third
shot between the eyes killed it.
Spence brought it out from
Howard meadows by pack horse
after blindfolding his bucking,
balking horse.
Murray Durham had no trou
ble making a kill from 150
yards, bagging a 90-pound year
ling brown bear. But it took him
five hours to pack it out three
miles to the road in rough coun
try. YA Cancels Order
Changes in Study
Washington, Oct. 6 MP) The
veterans administration can
celled today its controversial or
der restricting the rights of vet
erans to change courses of study
under the GI bill.
Veterans Administrator Carl
R. Gray, Jr., issued a new set
of regulations permitting many
veterans to change courses and
schools, or to take post graduate
study, or to enroll in schools es
tablished since September, 1944,
without providing special "Jus-1
tification.
The older order, now abol
ished, required "justification" in
such cases.
The new regulations continue
a ban on avocational or recrea
tional courses.
Grouse Hunter r'ined
Pendleton, Oct. 3 Wil
liam Milton N. Howell, Cor
vallis, charged with possession
of grouse during closed season,
was fined $54.50 in Pendleton
justice of peace court today and
his gun was confiscated. Den
zel Frank Fisher, Hood River,
charged with possession of un
tagged deer meat, was fined
$79.50 and his hunting license
confiscated.
3 Nations Planning
Atomic Partnership
Washington, Oct. 6 (IPi Un
dersecretary of State Webb said
today the United States, Britain
and Canada are considering a
"partnership" in the atomic en
ergy field.
He told a news conference
that "good progress" in explor
ing this possibility was made in
the recent American-British-Canadian
talks on atomic mat
ters. These discussions were ad
journed last week-end.
A full partnership among the
three governments would re
quire congressional approval.
IPresent laws forbid American
dentists from passing secret
itomic information to other nations.
Alaska Military
Program Approved
Washington, Oct. 6 W A
$154,611,000 military construc
tion program for Alaska and
Okinawa was approved today
by the house armed services
committee.
While the bulk of the program
is for supporting facilities such
as housing, much of it is ear
marked for radio and radar in
stallations, communications sys
tems end underground gasoline
storage.
Of the total $133,400,000
would be used in Alaska and the
rest in Okinawa.
Constipation
(Colitis)
Is a symptom, not a disease.
Rectal Ailments Are
the Underlying Factor
Hemorrhoids and other colon
ailments must be corrected.
No !.oss of Time
No Hospitalization
Free Descriptive Booklet
DR. R. REYNOLDS
Proctologist
Nature-Rectal Specialist
1144 Center St. alem. Ore
39 ftttituiC
TODAY'S GREATEST VALUE
IN ENTERTAINMENT!
Horse Show tickets include
general Admission for All
events
if Eleven Acres of
Livestock Exhibits
pY Land Products Show
pV Industrial Displays
Beef Cattle Auction
4-H and FFA Show
October 7 to 12
k Big Electrical Display
Wild Calf Scramble g
"k Dog Show and
Obedience Trials
October 14 and 15
Poultry and Rabbit
Show
"k Educational Exhibits.
FREE PARKING
TICKIT SALE at
J. K. GILL CO.
Night Shows and Sundoy Moll
noo Box Seats, $3.60; first 4
rows, $3.00; not T rows,
12.40.- last 2 rows. SI. 80. (In
cludes Fed. Tax and Control
Admission.! POPULAR PRICE
MATINEES Oct. 8th, Mth
nd 15th. Unrosorvad,
Boxes $3.o0. Childt
dor 18. 90c. (Includes
Tax and General Admission.)
MAIL ORDERS Wtito Exposi
tion offic. Enclose stamped
ddressod envelope.
No Telephone Orderf
MrZ jut
I mM Ileal SPIIoi,
'
I
DDT. 7-15
OPENS FRIDAY EVENING
Four Matinees Evening Performances Daily
The Pacific International Rodeo and Horse
Show is back again the greatest show of its
kind ever to be presented in Portland. Dozens
of added attractions and special events includ
ing new show classifications, exhibitions of
America's finest cutting horses; famous horses
and riders appearing here for the first time,
ic Death-Defying Sheriff's Posses
"k Daring Western Riders
k The West's Finest Show Horses
k World's Champion Cowboys
-Z2
8th, Mth yj,
red, $1.80 yA
ildt if .
ludos Fed. If J
fllplilMhp
Box 96 NORTH PORTLAND, OREGON TWinoakl 9851
Whatever theMce (Mass
SEE md HEAR Oi.SKS' mm JOH.X SOX'S FIREBALL
I aV-t OH-ALL tmry Thunday o TmUvmUm
I
t's part of every street scene
something you see every day.
mm
Car owners in three different price
classes all happy about the same
thing.
One of them drives a new Buick
Special, which you see poking forth
its new, bold-look forefront at the left
of our picture.
Another will tell you there's nothing
like the Super's "happy medium" of
size nnd comfort, power and easy
handling, style and standing.
And if you're looking for prestige,
where is your money going to buy so
much as in that handsome 18-footcr,
the Roadmaster, with its 150-hp
performance and really royal bear
ing?
But all these good folks get together
on this:
There's no ride quite so soft and
cushiony as the Buick ride, whatever
the size and series. There's no power
quite so satisfyingly lively as Buick's
high-compression, high-pressure
Fireball power.
Above all, there's no "buy" like a
Buick no car that gives you such a
rich dollar's worth of smartness,
handling, comfort and liveliness for
every dollar you pay.
So why not look the whole line over?
Your Buick dealer has these grand
travel-mates in a baker's dozen of
different body types and sizes. Start
your shopping in his showroom and
you'll find that even on delivery he
has exactly what you want.
TtXrt FTEV
to )c
GlcATtt VAIUI
MtViCK alone has all these features
Wirmoom DrfM'lOW MIVI e MU-VlfW VISION Inm nlsrgoa' (loss art e SWINO-MSY DOOM one) eoiy inn
"IIWNO SMCf INmiOltS Ooep.Crocfle cushions o luoront rWna OUA0UlK COI1 SrWINOINa Unlf MtfSAU
ITKAOW-IIOHf POWf srM IIIP-SITTINO VAIVI IffTfffS (Dr"oJo MoeWt) phl HI-fOISID INOINI MOUNTINGS . too
cMtvrt New w IMirt-HOI IMI . Ooublo-Our, VINflPOftrf . 0Uf X tMIINOS, Moto arxt cwMcMtg rods . SOOT X MM
SfenoVe a. XGAOMAJTEr, Voni ei CMi S. Iff' Vt&H no
When better automobiles are built ttl'tCK trill build them
tea 10 HENtT I. IAMO, ASC Neiwcat, e.eir Mender eroiiiftl.
OTTO J, WILSON CO.
388 N. Commercial St.
Salem, Ore.