SO Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, Dec. 15, 1949 r i -M' '.- -: wa iuip. i jiuii i j ! Futuramle Series "98" Oldsmobile lor 1950 Headlining Oldsmobile's new "Futuramic Fleet" for 1950 is the newly styled series "98" model, introducing a brand new body design, the widest and lowest Fisher Body in Oldsmobile history. Shown here is the four-door sedan, which offers greater vision both front and rear through use of curved glass. The luxurious new series "98" will be available in five body types. Wheelbase of the new model is 122 inches. Powered by the famous high-compression "Rocket" engine of 135 horsepower, the 1990 series "98" Oldsmobile will also have the new "Whlrlaway" hydra-matic drive, as optional equipment, giving Oldsmobile owners new smoothness in forward speeds and faster shifting Into reverse. Loder Bros, are the Salem dealers. Tiffs Feature Bridges Trial San Francisco, Dec. 15 W) Angry arguments and name- calling broke out In the Harry Bridges perjury trial in the nor mally sedate federal court again Wednesday. Above the rumpus was heard the implied threat of another contempt ot court cila tlon. It occurred when Defense At torney James Maclnnis asked 8 government witness if the man ever had been convicted of a felony. The witness was Manning R. Johnson, a Negro and professed ex-communist. He answered "No," as F. Joseph Donohue of the government's legal staff leaped to his feet with an objec tion. He assumed, he said, that Mac lnnis would produce a certified copy of a conviction ot felony, Maclnnis retorted '-'You may be sure of that." Johnson had testified that he had seen Bridges at meetings of top communist officials. Bridges, head of the CIO Longshore un ion, is on trial for perjury, charg ed with swearing falsely at his 1945 naturalization hearing that he wasn't and hadn't been a communist. Later, after more questioning, Mclnnis admitted that he didn't have a certified copy of con viction, but "I have here a tele gram from the chief of police (at Alliance, Neb.) who promis ed that a certified copy was on its way." Judge George B. Harris shook his head ominously at Maclnnis "I want, in fairness to you, coun sel," he told him, "to say I be lieved you had a certified copy in your possession. I think it was a fair inference from what you said." . Tuesday the trial was rock ed with laughter as Beezlcbub, the evil one of the Bible, was in jected into the trial by Johnson Jackson County to Get Air Ambulance Service Medford, Ore., Dec. 15 U.R Donations today passed the $3000 goal set by Mercy Flights, Inc., for purchase of an air am bulance plane to serve Jackson county. George Milligan, CAA con trol tower operator, is instiga tor of the plan and chairman of the non-profit group. The organization will furnish ambulance service on a doctor's certificate of need at cost, esti mated at $12 an hour. Most donations were small, Milligan said, with a large portion com ing from school children. All pilot, mechanic and other upkeep for the plane will be furnished on a volunteer basis, 1 4 Escape Injury As Ship Sinks Brunswick, Ga., Dec. 15 (U.R) Four persons escaped without injury and then drifted 15 hours on a life raft after their shrimp trawler burned and sank in the Atlantic south of here, the coast guard reported today. The survivors were identified as Henry Morison, captain and owner of the 50-foot trawler Ma ria; his wife, and two crewmen, Buster Symons and Dan Brown, all of Charleston, S.C. The Maria caught fire and burned to the waterline about 10 miles off nearby Cumberland island Monday afternoon, the coast guard said. The four per sons aboard barely had time to float a life raft and salvage boards to use as paddles. Morison said they drifted all night. Early Tuesday morning they sighted Cumberland island and paddled ashore about 4 a.m. They made their way to a telephone and called an inter island air taxi service, which picked them up and flew them to nearby St. Simor island. From there they were Uown to their homes in Charleston. Milligan said. Materials will be provided at cost by local air services. A twin-engine Cessna is now under option. Bobby, 11, Will Get His Wish For Christmas for Dead Mother Montoursvllle, Pa., Dec. 15 W) Eleven-year-old Bobby Lovell, is going to get his Christmas wish a tombstone for his mother's grave. Bobby's mother died in October, 1948, and was buried in the Montoursviile cemetery. Several days ago, the young ster who lives in a trailer camp with his father, an unemployed laborer on relief decided to find his mother's unmarked grave. His' search proved successful Tuesday after he had enlisted the aid of Police Chief Stanley C. Zartman. "Some day I'll have enough money to buy a marker for my mother's grave," Bobby told Zartman. The police chief related the story to a newspaper and the J. E. Gibbons company offered to donate a tombstone, engrave it and have it in place by Christ mas. Bobby examined the firm's stock, passed by a number of ornate stones and selected a two-by-three foot marker. "I would like very much to have that one," he said. "Now I can find mother's grave and put flowers on it." Meanwhile, local merchants promised Bobby's Christmas would not be without gifts, in cluding a permanent movie pass. And Zartman said he was mak ing arrangements to find Bobby a new home "under different environment." Formosa Last Hope of Chinese Taipeh, Formosa, Dec. 15 U.R) The battered Chinese nation alist regime today shook up its military and political arms in the hope of getting American aid for a "live or die" stand in Formosa. As Chinese communists rush ed preparations for an amphi bious assault on Formosa from the Chinese mainland, nation alist military and political dead- wood went into the discard. Imaginary army group com manders have been dropped from the payroll. Personnel of various branch es of the central government have been whittled down and a blueprint has been drafted to strip quasi-political and mili tary figures of their authority. When the purge is completed, provincial authorities will be in complete control of Formosa it self with the central govern ment's functions limited strict ly to national and international affairs. NLRB to Press Enforcement Washington, Dec. 15 (U.R) The national labor relations board said today it will seek federal court enforcement of its order to the International Typographical Union (AFL) to stop violating the Taft-Hartley act's ban on the closed shop. The board said its enforce ment division will prepare the case to take it to the U.S. circuit court of appeals. In such cases, the board asks the court to adopt the board order as its own. The board's action followed a request for enforcement filed December 1 by Elisha Hanson, general counsel of the American Newspaper Publishers' associa tion, which brought the charges against the ITU. The board made public today a letter to Hanson, dated De cember 8, saying it has "deter mined to proceed with enforce ment" and has started to take steps. Mrs. Piatt Faces Forgery Charge Bremerton, Dec. 15 (U.R) Prosecutor James Munro today revealed he has dismissed grand larceny charges against two men a pert young housewife admit ted hiring to kill her husband because of his "15 years of nightly love-making." Mrs. Margaret Susan Piatt, 31, Bremerton, told Munro she had hired Hollis D. Scott, 23, and Wallace Mottern, 22, also of Bremerton, to "get rid" of her husband, Wilford, 34. "I have dismissed charges of grand larceny by embezzlement against Scott and Mottern on the statutory ground of lack of witnesses," Munro said. He said he made the motion in Judge H. G. Sutton's court in Port Orch ard, Wash., yesterday. Mrs. Piatt originally charged the two men had "welched" on the deal after she had given them more than $1,500. A charge of attempted mur der against the tiny, blue-eyed housewife was changed to one of forgery after she had spent two weeks in jail awaiting ar raignment. Since then she has been free on $1,000 bail. The new charge is based on the allegation she forged title to her husband's car and sold it to pay Mottern and Scott. Munro has served written notice in Kitsap superior court that he will appeal the action of Judge Sutton in dismissing the at tempted murder charge. Meanwhile, Mrs. Piatt, who charged her husband "wanted to make love every night for 15 $$ MONEY $$ FHA i Vi Real Estate Loans Farm or City Personal and Auto Loans State Finance Co. 133 S. Rich St. Lie. S-216 M 122 years," until "I couldn't stand it any more," has reached a rec onciliation with her husband. Eugene Ordinance Hits At Delinquent Parents Eugene, Ore., Dec. 15 tU.PJ The Eugene city council Tues day passed an ordinance which would make the parents of "de linquent" children subject to fines of $200 and jail terms of 100 days. The ordinance did not list specified offenses children might commit and thereby make their parents subject to fines and jail terms. It only referred to parents of "delinquent" children. The world's two most popular canned vegetables ueit BIG Of LITTLE varieties of Sweet Peas . . . both equally tender! Unusually green . . . dcliciousty full-flavored! 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Snowdrift is grand for U your baking and frying ' - Cult in QUICK for fiaky pantry Ytixei wuiv.iv tor fender bttcuilt r into a large bowl: " 'P- loll '"king powd.r . (3 flDB. .1 I- Add: u "-"ciioni i. I tin .1 t h. rl. Mlx " ' """""din,) miier Add ' MM -".arn o...di,i. PVo ft. fri.l QUICK for digtibt frltdloodt I . imp. butler ahh . "ouvrli fuP chopped n, vs niad with A 1 i rum VtOITABll nOKIENIN9 MAII BT In I WESSON OH FEOril Millionslovfwesternousewives !5 Recent shortage of cane sugar helps kill old prejudice against beet sugar Recently there was a shortage of cane sugar on the West Coast. Millions of housewives bought beet sugar for the first time. Many had their doubts. Was beet sugar as good as cane? Was it as pure, as sweet, as white? Could it be trusted in baking and jelly-making? Well, as far as we can find out, the cakes and jellies were mighty tasty. These Western housewives were thoroughly satisfied. They proved to themselves that the old-time prejudice against beet sugar is just an old wives' tale. These new users of beet sugar now know what food experts have known for a generation that there is absolutely no differ ence between beet sugar and cane sugar. They are identical in sweetness, purity, whiteness, and fineness. Here's what the U. S. Department of Agriculture says: "Beet and cane sugar in refined, granulated form give equally good remits in jelly-making, canning, or cooking. The two sugars are chemically the same." -o.s.D.A.SwnN,.im-u YOUR BEST BUY IS BEET SUGAR Grown and produced right here in the West WESTERN BEET SUGAR PRODUCERS, INC. C (