Feeding Time A young chimpanzee is fed by Pop Marquis, vaudeville performing chimp, after being christened "Cheer ful Charlie" at London's Palladium theater. Charlie was flown to the British capital from Sierre Leone, West Africa. It's National Exchange Week At Stores After Christmas By HARMAN W. NICHOLS Washington, Dec. 28 U.R) This is National Exchange week. It's the week when you take back the hobby horse that went swayback and spilled junior and "mama" or go to sleep like it was supposed to. Oddly enough, the lines in front o the exchange counters in Washington were not as long as usual. On the first day after the! stores reopened, anyway. Storekeepers had the answer. The advertised post - Christ mas bargain sales where you could get "Misses better suits valued at $49.95 to $55 for $28;" j "$448 to $498 north black musk rat coats, federal tax included for $269;" "boys' hooded mack inaws valued from $7.95 to $8.95 for $5.99;" "$1.00 ties for 59 cents." That sort of thing, they say, took the minds off the carrying back business. In addition to the clearance sales, the department store man agers claimed that the exchange situation has eased considerably anyway since the war years. During those years, people trooped back because somebody sent a pair of 9 14 sox that didn't look good on a size 11 foot. Purple pajamas that irritated a blonde. Simply because sup plies were slim. A spokesman for Julius Gar finckel & Co., said that the bulk of exchanges these days is for size "and we rarely have to give back any money." A clerk at one counter was startled in the J. G. & Co., store yesterday when a portly gent in an ascot tie and spats wobbled in lugging a neatly wrapped package that obviously had not been opened at all. He tried to exchange . it at the lingerie counter. He said he wanted to trade it in "because the color isn't right. But he didn't know what color it was, or what was in the package. The clerk, with justification, argued politely. The man finally picked up his bundle and left Blue-Blooded Pooches Bow To Mongrels as Trick Dogs By PATRICIA CLARY Hollywood (U.R) Blue-blooded people having trouble getting ahead on their own, and the same goes for blue-blooded dogs The most successful dogs in this part of the country are mon grels. Mongrels are the easiest dogs to train, trainer Henry East says. They don't have a stack of old family customs behind them. "Pure-blooded dogs are so keyed up as a result of super-1 careful breeding," East said, : "that although they look pretty: they're almost worthless for the kind of work Rags and my other movie dogs do." This Cinderella dog is so smart, i- East said, that the trainer does n't have, to give him hand sig nals; wiggling a finger is en ough. ' "Uusually you give a dog a big. generous wave," East ex plained. "On a movie set that might upset the camera. So I trained Rags to recognize slight finger motions." Despite his brains, Rags has been assigned the role of Moron lea, which means just what it sounds like it does, in Colin Mil ler's "A Kiss for Corliss." And not only does he have to act stupid, but he has to dye his hair. ROOFING Now is the time to order that new root before the rainy winter season. Expert workmanship with the highest quality material. Free estimates without obligation. McGilchrist & Sons 25S No. Commercial Street Salem Phone 38478 the dolly that wouldn't say Musgrave and Mayor Differ Although Alderman Walter Musgrave could not agree with Mayor Robert L. Elfsirom on the mayor's opposition to the mall plan of the capitol planning commission, he commended the mayor for the thoroughness of his report and his bringing it to the fore as an issue. Musgrave favors the commis sion's recommendation for ex tension of the capitol zone north to D street. Mayor Elfstrom doubts the wisdom of that, preferring a zone more nearly square rather than rectangular. The rectangle, he told the council, would drive a wedge between the Capitol street business area and the downtown area, and he believes the tendency should be to unite them. The mayor also opposes the closing of Chemeketa and Union streets. Musgrave said a way to get around that would be to build underpasses beneath the mail. Most of the stores paged said they had senators and congress men coming back to trade in gifts. One senator who would just as soon his name didn't come out, said he didn't have much use for a fur-lined hunt ing coat. Me, I'm not exchanging my pair of bedroom slippers that light up in the middle of the night, via phosphorus. You even get a left and right on the shoes. "His hair is the same color as one of the girl's in the picture," East said. "They were afraid they'd look too much alike." So Rags showed up at the stu dio makeup department each morning at 7:45 a.m. and was given a henna rinse. Many of the other actors also were there dye ing their hair. Rags is rewarded for his work each evening by three quarters of a pound of red meat mixed with kibble. "I've got to keep him hungry all day to keep him on his toes," East said. "If he has lunch, he sleeps all afternoon." Each time he's scheduled to play a scene with an actor, he visits with the actor the day be fore. East claims Rags makes friends easily and instantly rec ognizes actors he previously has worked with. "He never forgets a smell," East explained. City Protects Packing Plant On recommendation of City Manager J. L. Franzen the cityj council approved an agreement: with United Growers, Inc., for fire protection for the com pany's packing plant at Liberty. Under the general city policy relative to protecting properties outside the city limits the con cern will pay the city $293. The city is under obligation to send fire fighting apparatus if equipment and men are avail able when a fire occurs. Lindow Loffa Chance Has Production Record Lindow Lotta Chance, a regis tered Jersey cow owned by Mr. and Mrs. John E. Lindow of In-: dependence, has completed a : production record of 9,963 pounds milk and 548 pounds butterfat which has qualified her for the Silver Medal award of the American Jersey Cattle club, with headquarters in Co lumbus. Lindow Lotta Chance's record : was made on 305 day actual pro- i duction at the age of 3 years and 2 months. All her tests were verified by both Oregon State college and the American Jersey Cattle club. In compiling this record she produced more than two and one-half times as much butter fat as the average dairy cow. in the United States. She has also been officially classified for type by the Cattle club with the high rating of good plus. Linn Livestock Men Meeting Soon Lebanon Jack Swanson, Leb anon stockman and president of the Liisi County Livestock asso ciation, calls attention to the or ganization's annual meeting at City hall on January 8, starting at 1U o clock. The program will interest all producers of swine, sheep and beef cattle, with H. A. Lindgren, livestock specialist at Oregon State college, discussing the re turns which may be expected from irrigated pastures. Plans are being developed. said Swanson, to have discus sions on Oregon State College's livestock research program, the recording of livestock brands. Oregon's livestock theft law, and predatory animal control. TITlt INH.IAKCI f i.1 I.VD('LT TICTISI The Smiths were the proudest people in th neighborhood. After saving for years, they had just moved into & home of their own! t Then suddenly clouds gathered. A former owner proved in court that an earlier deed to the property had been forged. Although they were innocent victims, the Smiths kt their home and the savings of a lifetime, A "T and T" title insurance policy would have safeguarded their investment. ' DSUDo Tilroasft Wit S Trirf Mttfef .325 $. W, fwrtfc MM , 9rafc Brmtteh Mtf 4ei Otffctt Mmt fetet Umi Cmiii UKm ttm Mfltotar Km4 thtt U Crantf MeMfnmM Utfw tofw Off Mfers Mtoi St.tem T SMh TMimiifc Tatarf CAMTAL, fUintfl AND IllttVtl OVtl Air Force Smashes Flying Saucers; 'No Such Things' j Washington. Dec. 28 iPi After checking up-on 375 rumors; of weird and wondrous sights in eluded that there aren't any "flying saucers." It took two years, a special team from the USAFs science staff, and helo from university consultants to track iown the rumors of strange discs whizzing througr the air. Last night the air iorce saio. "project flying saucer" the in vestigation started by the air ma-; teriel command at Wright base,: D3yton, Ohio, on January 22, 1948 has been ordered ended because there is nothing to show that the reports were "not the results of natural phenomena." AH evidence, it added, points: to three factors "misinterpreta tion of various conventional ob jects; a mild form of mass hys teria; or hoaxes" as the origin of the flying saucer reports Under air force definition, "various conventional objects" include such things as meteors, balloons, birds in flight or just ordinary optical illusions. The effect of last night's air force announcement was to deny a story appearing in the current edition of the magazine "True." The magazine said it had learned that "a rocket authority station ed at Wright field has told 'project saucer' personnel flatly that the saucers are interplane tary and that no other conclu sion is possible." The air force last spring sought to shoot, down the flying disc rumors with a long, detailed dis eussion of the whole history of: the rumors. It devoted a portion of that report to explaining why visitors weren t likely to rive from other planets on space ships. Among other things, the re port questioned the possibility of the existence of men even on the relatively near planet of Mars.iyears of investigation had cost. Discount Claim Flying Saucers' Space Ships of Outside Planet New York, Dec. 28 A sensational claim that so-called "fly ing saucers ' are space vehicles controversy on the subject today. The Air Force promptly discounted the claim. A spokesman said: 1 "Air force studies of 'flying: saucers lend no support to the: view that they come from an other planet." The assertion that the flying discs are real and that they are used by visitors from another planet was made by True maga zine in an article it calls the "most important true story we have ever published." It was written for the January issue by Donald E. Keyhoe, a former information chief for the aeronautics branch of the U. S. commerce department. The magazine, saying its con clusions were based on an eight months investigation, stated: "For the past 175 years, the planet earth has been under sys tematic close-range" examination by living, intelligent observers from another planet. "The intensity of this obser vation, and the frequency of the visits to the earth's atmosphere, by which it is being conducted, have increased markedly in the past two years." The flying discs, Keyhoe writes, vary "in no important particular from well-developed American plans for the explor ation of space expected to come to fruition within the next 50 years. There is reason to believe. however, that some other race of thinking beings is a matter of two and a quarter centuries ahead of us." The article says that "project saucer," operated by U. S. army air force investigators and charged with solving the mys tery, "are receiving and evalu ating" reports of sighted flying ItUIII IKUWI the sky, the air force has con- iEven If men were there, the USAF doubted that they were a technically established race," able to build space ships. The people who said they saw flying saucers varied widely. Some were housewives. A busi nessman back in June, 1847, thought he saw one while fly ing his private plane near Ml. Rainier, Wash. Other airmen began telling about odd-shaped "aircraft" moving at fantastic speeds, or curious lights and discs. So the air force moved in to run down the rumors Whatever these people saw, it was very real ta some of them Down at Godman air base. Ky., something that looked like an ice cream cone topped with red" was repotted. The con. troi tower at the field ordered four national guard fighter: planes flying in the vicinity to: investigate. The planes closed in. One pilot said he saw something of tremendous size round like 3: tear drop and at times almost! fluid." The flight leader radioed he was following the object and would abandon chase at 20.000-j foot altitude if he couldn't get! any closer. His body was found in the wreckage of his plane later in the day. The air force conclud ed he had collapsed from lack of oxygen when he reached 20,000 leet and his plane had gone down out of control. . Air force officials said today they were unable to estimate immediately how much the two from another planet Kimuea: new discs at the rate of 12 a month. True learned, Keyhoe says, that a rocket authority sta tioned at Wright field has toid 'project saucer personnel flatly that the saucers are interplan etary and that no other conclus ion is possible. Cases of reiiabiy reported sighting, the writer says, Bre closely checked by teams of air Intelligence officers and techni cians. Astronomers, rocket experts. guided missile consultants, aero medical men and other special ists work on a hush-hush basis. Keyhoe said. The magazine says the inter planetary vehicles have been identified and categorized as three main types a small, non- piiot carrying disc-shaped air craft equipped with some form of television or impulse trans mitter; a metallic disc-shaped aircraft operating on a helicopter principle, and a dirigmie-shaped wingless aircraft. It is the opinion of True, the article states, "that the fly ing saucers are real andthatthey come from no enemy on earth. II is also True's opinion that the air forces and project saucer are doing a serious important job to safeguard American security." Lebanon A downtown busi ness office has been opened by Biii's garbage service at 38 East Sherman street, AU accounts will be handled here, allowing patrons to pay directly to the company rather than mailing payments as had been the past practice. YOU WHO POSSESS A HEALTHY, VIGOROUS OOY flrtunit, ni pwjfeabiy owe moit f th good itrr tun t fcitity tiird-werfeinj prntt -wfca ftd d tithi yoa end did nt toddi yau iae mucJt. Tito who f not s9 ffttt r tferauji rieM eif fea good hhh "fcBid thm ttn wtc pU,w Hith uiut W l.ld, r4r into fcmj, ktmStd ut fcr edict sr t-fttieiwd. Vittt keUK it ry prw matter, 4jKWtdig ifiy en aw wet! tit ttsdutM, r d wtttr-kw r!I yt f$uJt fif, nd tsk cdvfltfc f modtrtt kmkcc tferajfe your Docter. II ynt with tft tniur yourwlf wornw tbeut Ho- mttl ni Doctor xpnwi, prtptid sitm rt & bi NOW, t ietfl,fi33 Amemtitt VOL UNTARY wy. Atk your Doctor.. Capitol Drug Store Sfef and Liberty 'On Cot , - r '. it. . If SllVSl. J tnmmm . iT .gig??? French Chief Major Gen. Clement Biane Bbove), 52-year-old veteran of both world wars, has been named by France's cabinet as Chief of Staff of French land forces. 7 UAL Hops Weekly To Hawaiian Islands - ! Seven round - trip flights ' weekly between San Francisco and Honolulu will be operated by United Air Lines with double-deck Mainliner Stratocruis ers beginning January 15. Travelers Hying to Hawaii will have a choice tst taking ei ther nine and one-haU hour daylight flights, to be operated on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fri days and Sundays, or equally fast overnight tries scheduled for Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Mainiiner Stratocruisers will carry 55 passengers on the main deck. The lower deck lounge, will be available to all passen gers for social gatherings, card playing and soft drinks, S!a!e Educational Post Calls Collins Albany Paul Collins, in structor in social studies and forensics, who announced his resignation to accept a position with the Oregon Educational as sociation, state-wide teacher s organization, as research and field service representative, will assume his new duties, January 1, and Wednesday marked his last m service o the Albany school system. The local Instructor's appoint ment came on recommendation of City School Superintendent L R- Haiselh, who said that Col lins name was submitted at the recent OEA convention in Port land as a potential appointee for one of two postiions which the state organization had open, Collins came here in Septem ber, 1945, foiiowing his gradua tion from the University of Ore gon. He and his family will move to Portland. Baby Survives Fall On Metal Radiator Albuquerque, N. M.t Dec. 28 A three-month -old boy was "doing pretty well" at St, Joseph's hospital today after falling from a bed onto a radi ator and suffering burns. Jimmy Hunter, son of Mr, and Mrs. George Hunter of Pocatello, Ida., rolled from a tourist court bed onto the hoi radiator, Bis parents said they had stepped out of the cabin for a few minutes when the accident occurred. Capital Journal Salem, Ore Critics Select 'All King's Men' New York, Dee. 28 New York critics have voted "AH the King's Men" the best motion pic- lure of 1S49. Other best-citations, voted yesterday by the group of 17 film critics of New York Metro politan daily newspapers, in cluded: Best actress Olivia de Ssvi land for the second successive year), for her portrayal of the title role in "The Heiress." Best actor Broderick Craw ford, for his role in "All the King's Men." Best director Carol Beed, for his direction of the British film. "The Fallen Idol." Best foreign language picture "The Bicycle Thief," an Ital ian film. Newsmen Barred By Czech Court Prague, Czechoslovakia, Dec. Western newsmen were barred today from the trial of young Swedish businessman who is on trial at Prague's Pan- krac prison on charges of indus trial espionage. Czech authorities told repre sentatives o? western news agencies there was "not enough Whtbr y du'j? Taovktj hs town w to a &tat city, m offer ih swt in worry-fee m&ringmrr tc. Our Ice nd mow issg fseiliii &r tiBxeii6. Aod u yprMtnit3TM tor Ailiod Vt XatU cftii p&e t y oa dipcai ifa koow-faow of the world's irfct io-nf-iitec xport pftckan, jEBilr b ions vry txp of tb way Ccii us fof ifaat. Red Star Transfer LihtrtT A Seinssni Ffe. 1811! Two (abs work tegesSwf to do big wosh ? Ust Jfeon one fceuri Sintei iuif food tSeor right in irmnq bctriceH No iei luirt rdd1 WWSs tioAw 25 d;w Open Friday BEUVEM 113 S. Commcrtio D Defiles k acsoss towM ot f on ibe tQBQmy Spin- 1 f I dtier oi A "bi" jf i out of wojhdoy. If i Wednesday. Sec. 28, 1343 a J room" at the tnat oue 10 tbt great Interest shown. But ftt official Czech jsew agency Ceteka had not carried a word ahmit the ImpenQmg triai. nor hart the eommusist-controHes newspapers of the country. No sneeifie accusation eiheF . ; i. . ! i .. f dstrial eGiona were iisc3- ed in the case of the defendant, 2fl-year-ola Holger Hjolm. Hs!m imoortttie urm. nas ceen m prison here for more than thre months. Amiiy Mrs, Hattte Wlths spent Christmas at Kewpcrfc witli Mr, and Mrs, M- S, Crow, her daughter and ofl-!n-laf $m VALLEY BREAD h m. f us "Redadfig Siiatiwf f&t as tit S ttjssy JUS VALLEY . BjlAD . 3ow is ciicrw yet is raw.' pjodBOBj prelfiB. '" SUN VALLEY ADDS YAJUIir5f "ferid iwpf4kx." J am m Ktnst Calories?: ft m m w m www t Mm it if u THEY'RE HERE! : HGOTIEEar New Portofclel Jmt t fi to" Ao1emoi 0elooi Swtcf pfOcH motor ! Ofl? Sov Money i S TODAY! Tii 9 p. m FAST TERMS