2 Capita! Journal, Salem TODAY'S BUSINESS MIRROR Nation Raises Bulwark Against Third World War Br SAM DAWSON New York. Nov. 12 W) The nation paused Friday to re. member Its dead of former wars it paused momentarily. In the midst of its drive to raise bulwarks against another one. Stockpiling of strategic war material is one way to make ready. Uprooting whole Industries from the two coasts and scattering them through the midianas k another step we are about to take. Subsidizing, In one form or another, industries we would need, and need badly and quick lv. In the event of war Is still another. Examples: the aircraft builders and the" ilrlines. Arming our friends In Eu rope, and sharpening our own defensive and offensive weap ons and at the same time hop lng that the three branches of our military power will be awe some day soon to work together is an even more direct course And preparing members of the armed forces to understand in dustrial problems a widespread practice in our universities just now is still another step to ward getting our factories quick ly onto a wartime production basis. Stockpiling has two aspects. One is the physical storing away of things the military must have to fight a war. The other is de veloping new sources of ma terials, and keeping old ones alive and kicking. Some ob servers think one is as im portant as the other. .A chemist yesterday tolcf the American Petroleum Institute meeting in Chicago what the nation must do to be sure it will have enough aviation gasoline to fly the A-bomb across the Atlantic, enough bunker oil to send the navy where needed, enough fuel and lubrication to feed the tanks and flame throw- $74,098 in Gifls Go To Higher Schools Portland, Ore., Nov. 12 (U.PJ The state board of higher edu cation today announced gifts and research grants received for state schools totalling $74, 098.72. University of Oregon's med ical school's share was $38, 823.72. Oregon State got $30, 933.50; University of Oregon, $3,974.50, and Eastern Oregon College of Education, $367.00. Salem Heights School Notes By JOHN HARVEY Mrs. Green's first grade made leaf sailboats during the week. The children fingerpalnted, and they covered their drums with fingerpaint. The class has a fun shelf, which contains games to play with. Mrs. Farrand's first grade had the bulletin board this week. The children will have pictures showing Armistice in 1918. The class is beginning to paint with kalsomine paint. The children are bringing things for a number corner. Douglas Nohlgren re turned to school after being out five weeks. The third grade has game boards to play with on rainy days. The games are ring-toss games. About 500 persons attended the harvest festival and open house on Friday, November 4. The 20-30 club presented the Salem Heights school with a Safety Sally on Wednesday to make motorists be careful of children crossing Liberty road In front of the school. Mr. Marion Miller, principal of the school, said the school appreci ates the club's interest in the school. Robert Hammond, sixth grade teacher, was absent Wednesday and Thursday of last week. The substitute was Mrs. Wolf. His room made pictures and carved wood for open house. The fifth grade is learning about the United Nations and has made a map of the UN. The same grade put on an assembly November 10, giving bookmarks to all children of the school, singing two songs, and drama tizing the new books In the li brary. David Bradshaw tied for first place In Oregon School of the Air broadcast of 'The Land of Make Believe" on KOAC. Jeanette Harrison won honor able mention on the broadcast. Coodsell Resigns Astoria, Nov. 12 James Coodsell has resigned the Clat sop county democratic central committee chairmanship. He will devote full time to his Job as executive secretary of the state party organization. Special Dinner Ol 801'P SALAD COLE'S 4135 Portland Road Open I P.M. Week Days Sunday at Noon Crispy Fried Chicken French Fries - ROLL Home Made Pie or Ice Cream Coffee - Tea Milk Ore'.,' Saturday, Vovl i2l"l949 To get enough petroleum for war or peace, says Walter G Whitman, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the na tion should: Develop better methods of finding oil; hunt more actively for It; restrict output from new fields to keep more in readi ness; develop Canadian fields and stockpile oil field and pipe line steel. The government Is working hard at producing oil from the western shale deposits, so that we could be independent of for eign sources. Private industry is trying to reduce the cost of making gaso line from coal Natural petro leum is cheaper, but the time might come when the costly shale and coal methods would be a necessity. Strategic metals producers have been seeking a govern ment subsidy to develop the poorer ore bodies in the west that can't stand alone In a com petitive market. Copper men. for example, point out that the nation can t afford not to keep copper mining going. As it is. It takes two or three months to change ore into refined cop per. And we couldn't afford to wait to open up the marginal mines, too, they argue. Synthetic rubber plants are also kept going in this coun try under the government's or ders, even though that pains the British, who would like to sell us more of their natural rubber. But the source of na tural rubber might be lost again, as it was to the Japanese, and we'd need the synthetic plants We are stockpiling natural rub ber, too, but that has been a revolving hoard, since it won't keep forever, and must move in and out of government ware houses. We are dependent on the Brit ish, Dutch and Bolivians for all our tin. And we are stockpiling that, too. FIGURES TROUBLE AHEAD OF TIME Mechanical Brain Checks Planes Before They Fly Dallas. Tex. U. A giant computer, which engineers suspect can do about anything except eat and sleep, imitates an airplane in flight at the Chance Vought aircraft plant here. It does Its tricks even before the airplane is built. The computer, lent by the Navy's research section for use In Vought's plant on the outskirts of Dallas, is operated by elec tronics. To hear the engineers describe the process, it's simple. They ad mit, however, that it takes years for an operator to learn how to Interpret the answers the ma chine comes up with. Once the mathematical com- ponents of the airplane have been plugged Into the computer the machine records the rate of vii, i,u ui enplane iu any height. I ,.n h. J' , . a,rP'ane-,0-' Phase, of a flight test can be .?? nfv ? n! , T .imulated in a short time on the ThJ ZZmI u JZl , m' "mP"'" nd. if the rudder does Jt "V "i,,?":1"." P-duce result,, other v.ria- V.h.V. ir..V,. . and other instruments, is being U5C" ,n experiments oy vougni s , engineers. IT-,,; u i V - J . U1C m": .1 i ZY"V"f,. : " ., .u.p.eu ,D operations. . . . . " toLiiiir, m iirw Illuaci airplane is not maneuverable a, Is desired. The engineers may decide the problem can be solv ed by changing the size or shape of the rudder. Previously, engineers would have designed a proposed rudder 11 riii.'n.r.in ENDS TODAY! 'PRIDE OF THE YANKEES" Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright "TALL IN THE SADDLE" John Wayne, Ella Ralnri 8tarU Tomorrow Cent. 1:4J SECOND FEATl'RC "THE FAN" Jranne Grain. Rlrhard Greene BP Still Eyed By California Placerville, Calif., Nov. 12 W The time is coming when the Columbia river's Bonneville project and California's central valley will be integrated for el ectric power, Rep. Clair Engle (D-Calif.) told a press confer ence. "And this will be to the mu tual benefit of the people of Cal ifornia and of Oregon and Washington," Engle predicted. "There are periods when there is a great waste of power output at Bonneville. If the two systems were integrated, that waste pow er could be transferred to Cali fornia through central valley to relieve shortages." Four Salem Women Injured in Wreck Four Salem women on their way to a National Secretaries' association convention in Taco ma, were hospitalized in Port land Friday afternoon with in juries received in a four-car pile-up. None of the injuries are serious. Injured were Lois Manning, 379 Richmond, driver, secretary to the state insurance commis sioner; Mrs. Ruby B. Hughes, 720 Mill, a county court report er; Doris A 1 b i n, 2085 Raynor, stenographer in the office of the McKillop lnsu ranee company and Anne Anderson, S01 N. Win ter, cashier for the Zellerbach Paper company. Driver of the lead car, Alvin A. Olstedt, Portland, told Mult nomah county police that his en gine had stalled about two blocks south of North Denver avenue on NE Union avenue and although the driver behind him swerved and avoided a collision, three others were not so fortu nate. The last two vehicles were badly damaged. Miss Manning has chest inju ries; Miss Anderson knee inju ries and bruises; Mrs. Hughes a possible broken wrist and a bruised right leg and Miss Albin bruises. Only one other of the 11 per sons in the four cars was in jured, Marga ret Buschmann, Marysville, Calif., driver of the third car, was treated for bruis es and dismissed from hospital ization. and production workers would have incorporated It into an ex perimental airplane. If it did not produce exactly the expected results when tested, however, another rudder would have to be built. That would re sult in further delay In comple tion of the airplane. The computer adds to an elec- ,rni, ..i,i.. . ,i,,.., ...j der of Bny size or gh wMh t n.nrlinl, ,h ,h, . .,. Hons can be used until the cor rect answcr is ,ound Fneineers emnhirf iw ih. mrhin. ,u . u:... i ww me- necessity of flight tests but point- ,1 out 'ht would reduce the "I"' flying time, supplement uhe lnformation and chcck it for accuracy, Pall Last Time Tonite "ROPE OF SAND" STARTS SUNDAY UK Ban ftrtacMi ttfrnt H ID OMn- ha Ce-Featura pom mm mmr 1 toson sixcims . flits mM RANDOLPH U. J " A I lW i MaaMMS(wamaaalKuav.V.: jaBBaaBaaia"i"MoIM Bound for Hollywood Eleven-year-old Arthur Briggs of New York City had an urge to travel and was especially in terested in going to Hollywood. Three times he ran away but didn't get out of the New York suburbs. The fourth try was partially successful, he was found stowed away aboard a TWA constellation which landed at St. Louis. Here he smiles at Walter Sharp (left), St. Louis county deputy sheriff, who arranged for the boy's return to New York. (AP Wirephoto) East Salem School Program Presents Work to Parents East Salem, Nov. 12 The "open house" a curriculum event planned by the school administration for all Salem schools in the fall during National Education week, i, fulfilling its purpose. That parents and teachers are becoming better acquainted is proven by the percentage of At Auburn school open houses- night the room of Mrs. Glenn Laverty is a good example, every mother but fouf being present for the evening and several of the teachers in ot-er schools re port good percentage in attend ance. In the fifth and sixth grade room at Auburn, Mrs. Marjorie Thompson, teacher, the special feature was an electric display, motor that the children had assembled, an electro magnet, an electric doorbell and a Morse Code key. For handcrafts there were leather work and wood carving. Around the walls were show card paintings and finger paintings while a special for the fifth grade was their large pic torial map showing occupations of Oregon. , Mrs. Laverty's room featured good books that the .children were reading, placed on the li brary table, and one table dis played all the new text books in social studies. In this room the children decided what the room decorations should be and where they would be placed and arranged the displays. The room decorations were flowers, gords. teasels, berry leaves and grasses. A model farm with its build ings and surrounding fields were displayed with a big corn shock, and other products grown around Salem. For art work pictures of buildings in Salem, the cap! tol. Willamette river and bank buildings were shown. On shelves HURRY, MUST END TONIGHT: ALAN LADD AND DONNA IT 2ND ACE HIT! A DIM W DEATH! Drama of sud den wealth thit bred only terror! I HI I J f nnw I HV! t - ineta ann VV EJj parents who are attending. were displays of the children's hobbies. There was a large col lection of rocks found in Ore gon. The first and second graders of Miss Sadie Roth, featured the pilgrims. Paper cutouts of Pil grims were used for borders, they had made small dolls and dressed them In black and white. A contrasting display was the room of today with the table set for a meal. There is a book club this room and records of books read posted on little fold ers. On the desks of all rooms were folders, some containing the work done since the term be gan and some Just a week's work. Auburn the regular meetlns of the Woman's club was held in tne community hall Thursday afternoon. It was an afternoon for sewing, with wool material used for the making of a quilt. NOW OPEN-THE NEW CHINA CAFE We Serve Chinese and American Dishes "ORDERS TO TAKE OUT" Open 4:30 P.M. to 2:00 A.M. Saturday Til 3 A.M. WE CLOSE MONDAYS 2055 Fairgrounds Road TT-t i VJQJvntn, Bn<Uuj Duvmal SmavM WWIU-BK I I M (jhat 'fUmmto Rod' Man! Ill b1ctEB.y king I i j W 1 SCREEN PUY BY LEN0RE C0FI EXTRA! DISNEY CARTOON "UGLY DUCKLING" Warner Newt . Student Ki By Frat Brother Columbus, O., Nov. 12 W An Ohio State university student was shot to death by a fraternity brother early today after a homecoming party at the Delta Tau Delta fraternity house. The victim was Jack T. Mc Keown, 23, of Norwood, a senior and managing editor of the Ohio State Lantern, student daily. Norwood is a suburb of Cincin nati. James D. Heer, 20, of Euclid, a first year veterinary student, was taken into custody some time later at the Columbus sew age disposal plant, 5 miles from the fraternity house, after tele phoning the state patrol. Euclid is near Cleveland. Detective Kenneth Anderson said Heer admitted the shooting. The officer quoted the student. " 'Whenever I get drunk, I get trigger-happy.' " McKeown was shot once with a .45 caliber automatic pistol as he tried to disarm Heer on the fraternity house lawn at 2:30 a. m., fraternity men said. Fraternity brothers said Heer went beserk after accompan ying a young woman home from the party. At police headquarters the tuxedo-attired Heer asserted he was intoxicated when the shoot ing occurred, Detective Ander son said. Heer related he was hohoreb ly discharged from the Marine corps in 1948. Road Dedication Sunday Portland, Nov. 12 (P) The new Warm Springs highway, cutting an hour and a half off the travel time between Port land and Bend, will be dedicat ed tomorrow. The ceremony will be held at the Mill Creek bridge. Civic leaders from Port land and central Oregon com munities will meet there. The program begins at 11:30 a.m. Ted Atkinson, Steve Brooks, Logan Batchellar, Benny Civi- tello and Doug Dodson are some of the top jockeys who will ride at Hialeah this winter. The vice president, Mrs. S. W. Burris presided at the busi ness meeting. A special after noon meeting for sewing to com plete this quilt will be held No vember 29 in the home of Mrs. E. C. Sunderlin. An evening Christmas party was planned and food for a Christmas box will be brought. Mrs. Verne L. Ostrander will represent the club on the board of the community club association. Members' birthdays noted were Mrs. Arlo McLain, Mrs. Henry Hanson and Mrs. Orval Prank. Hostesses for the refreshment hour were Mrs. Ostrander and Mrs. E. H. Eggens There were 12 members and three children present. Phone 2-6596 REED in "CHICAGO DEADLINE" & "THE STAGECOACH KID" r,Di IV 1 NINE D(W . ." our Corners School Has Interest of Community Four Corners, Nov. 12 Open house at Lincoln school Thurs day evening was so interesting, educational and completely dif ferent that from the first step inside the door when the visitors glimpsed the expanse of the long corridor to the last good night, V the conversations were mostly exclamations. From little girls in braid and ruffled dresses and little boys walking in exact imitation of "Daddy" to proudly intro duce their teacher and person ally conducted their parents through the building; to Arthur V. Myers and his staff greeting the 1000 Darents and friends wno called to Inspect their school building it was a friendly and enjoyable home like atmos phere. In the first grade rooms "po- tatn turkevs" and sawdust mache animals and vegetables competed with the "Lincoln Air Service advertising a regularly sched uled flight. A farm project in the second and third grade rooms.complete with red roofed buildings, fields and fences vied with paper plate clocks so real thev almost gave off a tick-tock and Jar lid plaques demonstra ting much artistic ability. A products map of the United States and relief maps of the United States and one of Ore eon which gave the observers a comprehensive idea of where his orange juice for breakfast or the flour for bread was produced was the worn projeci oi me fourth grade. A water wheel constructed of tinker toys that really worked and other factual problems of weaving and sewing and a map of early Oregon history were dis played by the fifth graders. Relief maps of sawdust mache and clav modeling were some of the things the sixth graders had on display. The music room also equip ped with visual education screen, the library with shelves low enough for little hands is ad equate for a much increased en rollment. The health rooms, faculty room and school office are so splendidly arranged and dove-tailing so well Into the needs of the school that a feel lng of complete harmony pre vails throughout the building. In the front hall is glass en closed case with the caption De mocracy at Work that is well worth any parents' time to see. Situated near the center of the Four Corners community many children go home for lunch. For those living at a dis tance the school serves lunches under the most complete and sanitary methods science has de vised. The tables are of the folding variety disappearing into wall leaving a large, comfort able auditorium for many school 2 GREAT HITS! Kathryn Grayson Jose Iturbi Mario Lanza in THAT MIDNIGHT KISS' and Fred MacMurrsy Maureen O'Hara In "FATHER WAS A FULLBACK" J Mv? JL c r SaV V I 1 11 mm - uses. A covered play yard for rainy days is provided. The members of the Mother's club donated and served the refresh ments. German Shipyard Owners Convicted Hamburg, Nov. 12 () A Bri tish court today found the own ers of Germany's largest ship yard guilty of illegally attempt ing to evade dismantling. Rudolf Blohm, senior partner of Blohm and Voss, was ordered to pay a 8.000 mark fine ($1,250) or serve five months in prison. His. brother, Walter, was or dered to pay 10,000 marks ($2, 500) or serve 10 months. Four other defendants found guilty were sentenced to prison. They were Otto Dalldorf, 12 months, Heinrigh Lorenzen, 12 months. Max Andreae, 12 months and 2,000 ($500) fine or three more months imprison ment; Karl Heindenreich, nine months. Mat Daily from 1 p.m. Now! Double Fan! Thrill Ca-HIt! Cont, from 1 p.m. NOW! ADVENTURE! (At Regular Prices) Salem's Show Bargain 2 FIRST RUN S HITS! Waflt Ends Today! Cont. Shows John Mills "THE OCTOBER MAN" e Charles Starrett "South of Death Valley" TOMORROW! Jimmy Wakely "Roaring Westward" New Show Tomorrow Starts at 6:15 p.m. Bud Abbott Lou Costello "Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer Boris Karloff" Ida Luplno Richard Wldmark "Road House" Last Times Tonite! I 1 1 Starts at 6:15 p.m. I j 1 1 Fred MacMurray I I 1 1 Maureen O'Hara I I I Rudy Vallee 1 1 I I "FATHER WAS I f 41 A FULLBACK" Ik III RoyAcuff III III Jacqueline Thomas Iff "HOME IN HI Ml SAN ANTONE" III CO-FEATURE! mm J