y V Independence Seeks Queen Independence The city of Independence received an invi tation to participate in the 1950 "Miss Oregon" pageant at Sea side next July, and if the invi tation is accepted some local girl will have the opportunity to compete for the title "Miss Oregon" who will represent the state at the "Miss America pa geant in September at Atlantic City. A franchise for participation In the fourth annual "Miss Ore gon" pageant to be held at Sea side on July 21, 22 and 23, has been sent to the Chamber of Commerce, with the hope that the chamber will sponsor a lo cal contest; to pick one who will represent Independence at the Seaside pageant. The "Miss Oregon" pageant is open to girls between the ages of 18 and 28, inclusive, who are residents of Oregon, and who have never been married. Pro viding the invitation to partici pate is accepted, the winner will go to Seaside with all expenses paid, to compete for the title "Miss Oregon. At seaside sne will be judged on a basis of her talent, her personality, her ap pearance In formal dress, and her appearance in a bathing suit, each having equal bearing on the final score. Two Oregon girls have been among the winners in Atlantic City, in the three years that Ore gon has sent a representative to that event. They have won schol arships, one to the University of Oregon and the other to the San Francisco Conservatory of Mu ic. Eleven of the girls who took part in the 1949 contest at Sea side were offered scholarships to Pacific university. Highways Break Up in Stale Portland, March 17 VP) Ore gon highways are deteriorating iaster than they are being re placed, State Sen. Paul Patter son, Hillsboro, told the Oregon State Motor association annual banquet Wednesday night. He said the state faces "an ex penditure of $750,000,000 more to bring Oregon highways up to an acceptable standard. We mo torists are going to have to pre pare ourselves to pay for these improvements if we want them." That means still higher auto license fees and gasoline taxes, he predicted. Dr. E. B. McDaniel was re elected president of the associa tion for the 23rd time. Mr. and Mrs. Berg in Tournament Lead Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Berg jumped into a 15-match-point lead in the first half of the open pair championship bridge tour nament being conducted by the Elks Bridge club. Closely grouped for next po sition are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Lewis, Mrs. John S Bone and Mrs. Edward E. Roth, and Mrs. George D. Henderson and Mrs. Leona Taylor in order. The 16 teams entered in the annual event will play the fi nal session - Friday evening, March 24, at the Elks club. Last year Mr. and Mrs. Lewis tied with Mrs. W. E Kimsey and Mrs. Ellis H. Jones for the honor. The regular weekly tournament will be held Monday evening, start ing another special series. Now Really CHEW Food! If your fake teeth dtp. nerVs aeoov. tr7 that enablee tnouaanda to asaln mu Joyously Into a Juicy steak and ereri eat tpplM wd oorn on too ooo without fe&r at pUM illpplnf . If. ft wonderful new eresm In ft band tube, called 8TAZB. STAZB hold plaice Ugnter. looser aeftia eogee keep out food partlclea. Oet economloali t aTAXa. Maner-herl fuanate, I How British Sub Is Being Raised The lalvage vessels Ausdauer (left) and Energie get into position in the Thames estuary off Sheerness, Eng., for start of salvaging operations by which sunken British submarine Truculent is being raised. Truculent was raised 54 feet from bottom but operations were suspended because of damage to lifting gear of one of the salvage vessels. The submarine was sent to bottom with loss of 64 lives after collision with Swedish tanker Divina. (AP Wirephoto) Kaiser Industrial Empire Tells Its Story in Booklet By RALPH HEPPE Oakland, Calif., March 17 VP) Kaiser industries, making 140 products from aluminum to xylol, has decided to tell of Its niche in the national economy. In a pictorial booklet issued Thursday, it puts together for the first time the story of the war-nurtured industrial empire of Henrv J. Kaiser and asoclates. ' Here are some of the claims of the industrial group: It produces and sells annual ly a half billion dollars worth of products and services. Payrolls exceed $128,000,000. Annual purchases are in ex cess of $60,000,000. s Employes number more than 46,000. The 44 Kaiser plants are scat tered from Baton Rouge to Spo kane, and from Oakland to Bris tol, Pa. They include, the book let says: The west's largest cement plant. One of the nation s three larg est producers of aluminum. The Pacific coast s only inte grated steel plant, with a capa city of 1,130,000 tons of Ingots annually. The only aluminum foil roll ing mill west of the Mississippi. Products, to name a few, are: aluminum and automobiles, brick and bathtubs, cement and creosote, gypsum and gravel, garage doors, kitchen sinks, sand and steel and chemicals such as toluol and xylol. There are other activities, too such as: eleven hospitals and clinics, home building, engineer ing, heavy construction and min ing. Then there is a steamship com pany to transport bulk cement and a 52-mile standard guage, private railroad to haul iron ore for the steel plant at Fontana, Calif. The heavy construction, the group points to work on Grand )ifcDu c4b YEARS OLD PRICE REDUCED 86 PROOF $060 AH 3' $230 Coulee dam, Bonneville dam, the Long Beach and Los Angeles breakwaters, the Hoover dam and other projects of similar scope. Kaiser, founding genius back of the organization, is the son of a German immigrant family, one of four children. Born at Sprout Brook, N. Y., on May 9, 1882, he left school at the age of 13 to go to work. He started out as a cash boy and salesman - for a New York dry goods store. At a restless age he turned to the Pacific north west to enter the hardware sell ing field. By 1914 he had formed his first company, engaged in pav ing operations in British Colum bia. The great western dams, pro ducts of the '30's, found Kaiser Joining with other construction companies to build these Im mense works Hoover dam, Bonneville dam and Grand Cou lee. In World War II, 50 shipways in Kaiser-managed yards in the three Pacific coast states put out 1,490 ships of all types more than a third of U. S. merchant ship construction during the war. On April 8, 1907, Kaiser mar ried Bessie Fosburgh of Boston. Their two sons, Edgar and Henry, Jr., are asociated with their father. Edgar is president of one of the newest enterprises, the Kaiser-Frazer Corp. which makes automobiles at Willow Run, Mich. QUART PINT Lora Lee Must To Catch Up on .Hollywood. March 17. IU.R) lucrative screen career to begin catching up on the "happy, nor mal life" a judge said she has missed. The nine-year-old actress played with other children in juvenille hall, completely unconcerned that her' days as a $100 a-day starlet were over. Judge A. A. Scott made blonde Lora Lee a ward of his juvenile court and made it clear that the only acting she might do in the future would be for her playmates and not for a camera. After conferring with the girl's foster parents yesterday, the judge said: Lora Lee has missed many beautiful things that should be a part of childhood. I intend to see that she gets them. She def initely will not act in another picture while under my juris diction." Mr. and Mrs. Otto Michel, the retired actress' foster parents, agreed wholeheartedly with Scott's decision. The strange case of the "poor little rich girl" came to Judge Scott's attention for a second time this week when she ran away from her home with the Michels Monday night. Scott recently rejected the claim of Lora Lee's natural mo ther, Mrs. Lena Brunson of Ne derland, Tex., for her custody. At that time, he implicitly or dered that Lora Lee be kept off the screen, Lora Lee fled the Michel home in her pajamas and bare feet. She took refuge in the home of the Rev. Aired Sund strum in nearby Burbank. The girl told officers her foster par ents had mistreated her and re peated charges that they kept her underfed to keep her small for screen roles. Scott immediately held two talks with Lora Lee "to get to the bottom of this whole mat ter." He apparently did. The judge said he was satis fied the Michels had not mis treated Lora Lee particularly after the girl changed her orig inal stories and told Scott "I love them." "Because Lora Lee is a prob lem child, without question, we expect to have considerable dif ficulty in finding a home to suit her needs," Scott said. "But she must now be allowed to live the life of normal childhood and to associate with children of her own age. The jurist said a "psychologi cal study" will be made of Lora Lee before anything else is done is the matter The Michels filed a petion asking Scott to help plan Lora Lee's future the one without any movie-making in it. The judge said he may have 3Mx-'tUM t WW VU Mb in iiiiiif STRAIGHT B 0 ORB ON WHISICY ou Hauotf mtiiuno cotrouno Hiitpumu, tK, Give Up F'-WChoir lo Sing a Happy Life Tiny Lora Lee Michel left her Stories Conflict Child ac tress Lora Lee Michel, 9, who charges her foster parents starved her so she'd stay small enough for movie roles, gives a look of approval as she drinks milk in Juvenile hall at Los Angeles. Judge A. A Scott, attempting to learn whether the $100-a-day ac tress is telling the truth or acting, said he was concerned about the differences in the girl's stories. "Lora Lee is a precious, emotional child who could get a lot of people in trouble," Judge Scott said. (Acme Telephoto) Laurel and Hardy To Try Luck in Paris Hollywood, March 17 VP)- Neglected by Hollywood, Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy will go to Paris to make their first pic ture after a five year screen ab sence. 'The deal sounds like the best we've had in years," Hardy said today. "We have a good story, and that's important. "We've had many Hollywood offers, but none have included good stories." The comics will leave next month for Paris, where the film will be made in English and French. Lora Lee placed in a private school but added whatever done "no one, not even the press, will known what my fu ture plans are for her." Mrs. Michel still must face trial on March 21 on previous charges she mistreated Lora Lee. on. W U . GREAT NAME! GREAT BOURBON! At Silverton Willamette university's a cap pclla choir has scheduled a con cert in Silverton on March 30 at the Silverton high school au ditorium according to concert tour, plans announced by choir officials. The 60 voice traveling group will be selected from a choir of 84 under the direction of Mel vin H. Geist, dean of the college of music. The Silverton concert is sponsored by the local Jay-c- ettcs as a benefit for the welfare fund. The co-chairmen for this project are Mrs. William Duncan and Mrs. Harlan Moe. The choir will begin its 1950 tour at Silverton, and will tra vel as far north as Vancouver, B.C. The choir has toured ex tensively throughout the Paci- It started with this Jlc t Petri I; Sherry j 9 LCI - rr- Petri Wine m When the occtilon nils for a grew wine ctiooie Petri Wine. Its richer, more satisfying tut results from three generation of wine-making skilL Enjoy Petri Wine often! mttcti EbIGQ The for r)axl Ironing RADIRON eomfort. 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It forms the nucleus of the Salem Oratorio society and appears frequently in com munity musical programs. It appears annually in invitational concerts in Portland Sand Point Station May Go to Reserve Seattle, March 17 VP) Navy undersecretary Dan A. Kimball reported plans Thursday to re duce the Sand Point naval air station here to a reserve status by the year's end. The Times Washington, D. C, It went over Kg with this! m PETRI WINE CO., SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. ranee SSh On New Electric Iron New OMrftwraW gwfwaf (Moett hi WOfWftMIMffJp for ftwo yumr. COSTS IfSS THAN REGULAR TIRE AND SAEETY-TYJE TUBE IK W BFGoodriek T'n m .tv Buys 1.89 79c 5.95 Stall punctures iottaotly and permanent W aa you drive. Tube troubles ended for good! New B. F. Goodrich "Rythm Ride" for aftaier comfort, safety, miles. Stop in get a act today. : LIBERA lTRADE-IN ALLOWANCE TIRE HEADQUARTERS Corner Ferry St. & So. Com'l (Across from Marion Hotel) DIAL 3-9156 Friday, March 17, 1950 9 correspondent said Kimball had advised Rep. Henry Jackson of the plan to devote the base to member of reserve units. The dispatch quoted Kimball as saying the 1,452 civilian jobs at the station will be reduced to 97. He told Jackson that efforts will be made to transfer the per sonnel to other naval installa tions. Kimball wrote Jackson: "This transfer focuses added interest on the need for the permanent developement of the Whidby Is land naval air station." The dispatch said Kimball es timated the Sand Point cutback will save $2,000,000 yearly. MORE SHOE MILEAGE! Sturdy, durable ma terials and factory methods workman ship mean longer wear for your shoes when they're repaired herel Only top grain leathers and com position materials used by our crafts men. The extra wear you'll get from your shoes will mean extra dollars In your pursel Jim's Shoe Service 175 N. 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