Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 02, 1949, Page 10, Image 10

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    Journal, Salem, Or- Wednesday, Nov. 2, m9CQMMANDED CARRIER IN WAR
)7
Piano Wreckage Searched Firemen search the wreckage
of Eastern Airlines plane which crashed near the Washing
ton, D. C, National airport, following a mid-air collision
with a Bolivian military plane. (AP Wirephoto.)
Lone Survivor of Mid-Air Crash Nurse Joan Bason
watches over Eric Rios Bridoux, pilot of the P-38 that col
lided with an Eastern Airlines plane, as she gives him blood
plasma at Alexandria hospital In Alexandria, Va. Bridoux
was the only survivor of the erash that took 54 lives. (Acme
Telephoto.)
Adm. Sherman, New Navy Head
Knows All Naval Operations
Washington, Nov. 2 () It was Vice Admiral Forrest P. Sher
man's record in the long controversy over military unification
which first fastened attention on him for possible appointment
as chief of naval operations.
Back in 1946 he and the then Ma). Gen. Lauris Norstad of the
air force found common ground
Power Needed in
State Says McKay
Baker, Nov. 1 VP) Water pow
er development and natural re
course conservation are the bas
is of getting more Jobs In Ore
gon, Gov. Douglas McKay said
here yesterday.
"We will attract Industry
when we get out of the power
shortage." he said. The gover
nor said he didn't think this
would be very soon.
He urged Oregonians to seek
opportunity rather than secur
ity. He said the state should
process more of Its farm prod
ucts and increase lumber fabri
cation operations.
Friendly Hour Club
Making School Quilt
Sunnyside The Friendly
Hour club held its first fall
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Kleinsmith. A quilt was tied and
finished and is to be presented
to the Sunnyside school.
Those present were Mrs.
Kloch, Mrs. Rose Burse, Mrs.
Qeneva Bunse, Mrs. Dutoit, Mrs.
Violet Heckart, Mrs. Graham,
Mrs. Popsisll, Mrs. Wyooff and
the hostess, Mrs. Kleinsmith.
The next meeting will be an
all-day affair with a no-host din
ner at the home of Mrs. Ray
Heckart November 10. Plans
will be made for a bazaar to be
held at the school house in the
near future.
Aerial Collisions Fatal
Washington, Nov. X MV-Aer-ial
collisions have caused the on
ly fatal accidents on the airlines
in the past 14 months.
on which to work out a com
promise on unification. Both
were air officers.
Sherman was the negotiator
for the navy when the army and
the then army air forces sought
to produce a compromise bill
that would meet some of the ob
jections to unification raised by
the navy department.
The proposals produced by the
small group of high navy and
air force officials, of which
Sherman and Norstad were mem
bers, received the approval of
President Truman and the com
promise version became the unl
fication law with the passage
by congress.
The admiral Is thoroughly
familiar with carrier operation
which now has become the basic
plan around which all naval
striking forces are built.
He knows the administrative
problems in Washington where
he has served a number of times
and the harsh realities of
combat. Of that, he saw much
in the Pacific campaign of World
War II. Among his war com
mands was the original Carrier
Wasp, sunk in the Solomon Is
land battle of September, 1942.
It appears to have been Sher
man's experiences in the air-land-sea
Pacific war that con
vinced him of the need for uni
fied command at Washington.
He has said that every success
ful offensive in the Pacific was
made possible by combined plan
ning among the sea, air and land
commanders of that theater.
Sherman, 55 years old last
Sunday, is a native of Merri
mack, N.H., and a naval acade
my graduate second in his class
of 203 in 1917. He went overseas
almost immediately after his
graduation, assigned to Ameri
can naval forces in the Mediter
ranean.
From 1917 to 1922 he was
junior officer aboard a number
of destroyers, cruisers and battle
ships.
But in that year he decided
he wanted to cast his fortune
with naval aviation, then a tiny
fraction of seapower. He has
remained in that service since.
Sherman no sooner finished
his arbitration role in the 1946
47 unification dispute than he
round he was headed for another
tough job command of the
United States task fleet in the
Mediterranean.
There the fleet, built around
aircraft carriers, represent the
"implementation" to American
foreign policy, of which diplo
mats speak. Its commander has i
to be part diplomat, part navy
officer to sail the precise course
through international shoals In
that part of the world.
Sherman is about six feet tall,
gray-haired, with a round but
rugged face. No middle age
bulges have touched his figure;
exercise takes care of that.
He has a reputation of getting
along with people both outside
and inside the navy a quality
which presumably contributed
to the interest of the Pentagon
high command in the admiral.
Coffee Prices
May Rise Again
Seattle, Nov. 2 m Coffee
prices, which have jumped ap
proximately six cents a pound
in the last week, may go up an
other 10 cents in a week or 10
days, a Seattle wholesaler said
yesterday.
He and other dealers put the
blame on three problems: Ex
haustion of backlogged South
American stocks; increased cof
fee consumption; and destruc
tion of this year's crop by
drought in Brazil and Colombia
and by flood in Central America
The pinch from the drought
and flood won't be felt until
next year, retailers predicted
but the first two reasons already
have struck at the consumers'
pocketbooks.
Present retail prices here
range from 48 to 60 cents a
pound.
Tough Outlaw
Gives up Meekly
El Paso, Tex., Nov. i U.RJ
Gunman Jack Tatum, touted as
one of the toughest outlaws In
the southwest, surrendered
meekly when FBI agents seized
him In downtown El Paso, gov
ernment officials said today.
Tatum, who broke out of a
Phoenix, Ariz., jail two weeks
ago, was recognized on the street
yesterday by an alert federal
agent despite the fact that the
bandit was thin from undernourishment.
The 28-year-old fugitive was
unarmed. Warnings spread
throughout southwestern states
had urged officials to use ex-
Test Pilot Drowned
In Jet Plane Crash
San Diego, Calif., Nov. 2 U.R
Navy Test Pilot Lt. (J.G.) Wal
ter C. Hardoridge drowned
while rescuers frantically at
tempted to raise his crashed jet
plane 10 feet to the surface.
Salvage teams sped to th e
crash scene only 100 yards off
North Island Naval air station
yesterday and struggled against
a rising tide to lift the Shoot
ing Star to the surface in hopes
Hardbridge still survived in the
pressurized cockpit.
The pressurized seal was
wrenched open in the crash,
however, allowing water to seep
in. The Maywood, Cal., air
man's body showed no signs he
had been killed by the impact,
doctors said.
treme caution In attempting
capture because he was "believ
ed armed and dangerous."
He offered not the slightest
resistance when he was arrest
ed. Office workers hurried past
him on the sidewalk, scarcely
noticing the little drama in
which one of the most hunted
outlaws in the nation was re
turned to Justice.
Tatum was neatly-dressed but
his pockets held only 20 cents.
He admitted that he had been
hungry almost continuously
since the Jailbreak.
Turkey Dinner Assured
Frankfurt, Germany, Nov. 2
UP) Turkey dinners on Thanks
giving were assured today for
American troops in Germany
and Austria. The army announc
ed that 383,396 pounds of tur
keys have arrived in Bremer-haven.
ZONOLITE'
is EASY TO INSTALL
Don't pay high prices to have workmen insu
late your home! You can do the job yourself in
few hours if you use Zonolite. This famous
Vermiculite insulation is lightweight, easy to
handle. Just open a bag and pour between
joists in your attic. It flows into every nook and
cranny. And once installed, Zonolite is good
for the life of the building.
You do more than save dollars on installation costs by
using Zonolite. You save up to 40 on your fuel bills!
This amazing insulation also gives you extra fire protec
tion. It's Flame Tested is so fireproof it actually snuffs
out flame! Come in today and get Zonolite. It's the money
saving way to insulate your home!
je Zmotitt it m twamdirmdtmmrk tZimlitt Ompf
That Convenient
Location
The United States was the
greatest candy-producing coun
try in the world in 1948.
ymmmmmmmmmmmigimmms
for
Fine
Entertainment
NO
CARBON!
SOOT!
DIAL NOW
35622 or 35606
For Your Load of
CATERIZED.OIL!
Howard J. Smalley
Oil Co. 1405 Broadway
I
1S1II
yNiJJ
Strange Disease
Strikes Unalaska
Anchorage, Alaska, Nov. 2 UPi
The mysterious epidemic that
killed two children recently be
fore being brought under con
trol has struck again at Unalas
ka, the civilian town near Dutch
Harbor.
Dr. Robert L. Smith, assistant
commissioner of the Alaska de
partment of health here, said Dr.
Wendell Matthews and Bacteri
ologist Frank Pauls flew into the
are yesterday in response to a
plea for additional help. They
took medical supplies and equip
ment to diagnose the disease.
i m lit. j . 1 . ,
Bimin saio inu epiaemir i
fects children under five years
a
Death by Diphtheria
Brings Autopsy Order
McMinnville, Ore.. Nov. 2
An autopsy has been ordered by
Dr. H. M. Stolte and Glenn Ma-
cy, Jr., coroner, in connection
with the death Sunday of Caro
lyn Cruickshank, 11-year-old
Dayton girl who died from diph
theria. She was the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cruickshank
Dayton Rt. 1. The fatality was
the first in connection with
other outbreaks in Yamhill coun
ty.
PM
BLENDED WJUSKEY
is jPeosmcr
JMwisL
$3 2
4S QT. PINT
clear
clean
taste! I
National Distillers Products Corporation, New York, N. Y! j
Blended Whiskey. 86 Proof. b Grain Neutral Spirits; I
3&
,ts a wtmm's kt
-that's
FuIS-TOHLOCS
JHI ttMVMMNT, CUAN,
tmCMNT FU&
CAPITOL LUMBER CO.
N. Cherry Ave.
fhon or 14411
Moving Sew
l ACROSS TOWN OR
EACROM THI NATION J
Wbeshar yoa'n moYinf fa towa
e to a distant city, w offw the
fitwrt in worry-free moving mtt
Im. Our local ttenm and moT
tftl niailitMs am unoscrlled. And
npnaoniatiTM for Allied
Van Unas we can place at your
dWwaal ah know-how of th
world's tfwiort loaf-diitanre
snoring mmiaawon. AUiod'a
apart paikias, bandlora and
difm assoawasd your pca-tr-ions
tnmrr atop of lha way.
uiahi
Rtd Star Transfer
tHf .kmont fk, .ilt
I
OREGON
DEPT.0fAGM(IMURE
INSPECTED
AND
PASSED
A 1
Salem's Retail Packing Plant 351 State St.
ONE WEEK MEAT SALE
OREGON
fCWOfACRKBLfURf
INSPECTED
SNO
PASSED
A 1
It has been a long time since we have offered values like these. REASON? Well everyone knows that livestock has been plentiful. We bought
a lot and are going to sell it. NO TRICKY 'BARGAINS', WHEN YOU SEE IT IN OUR AD IT'S SO.
Pork Coasts V331
Pork Chops
Little
Loin
lb.
49'
Pork Steak
Laon
Blode
lb.
391
Pork Etoast
Loin
End
lb.
47
WHAT WE SAY about our meats may sell you th. first time, but It is YOUR .xp.ri.nc. with It that will mak. you MIDGET CUSTOMER!
kiR-IaL5iRJ.0-- a TASTY, TENDER YOUNG BEEF PLATE-RIB
BONELESS STEAK RIB STEAKS POT ROAST BEEF TO BOIL
59c 49c lhm 37c lb 19c ib,
A. . PURE PORK PURE PORK HOME-RENDERED
GROUND BEEF SAUSAGE LITTLE LINKS PURE LARD
35c ib. 3gCb- 45c ,b 2 ibs. 25c
TO THE THINKING CUSTOMER: rt foWt sound ratonabl, that good mot tan b. sold for Itss aft.r it is ground! Wall, it n't b. That is why eur grounds meets
t. a TRIFLE HIGHER in prica. This is to aaploiw why - NUFF SEP!
PARTICULAR PEOPLE PATRONIZE THE MIDGET