Tuesday. August 25, 1953 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Sale. Oregon n : : Tele - ? Radio-TeleviiAn. p ,;cj m tj DAVE Via a long distance phone call late Monday afternoon to Joseph Brenner, vice-president Westways Broadcasting company, which is licensee Salem television channel 24. The KPIC spokesman assured Tele-Views that they were making final "clearances" with Lawrence Harvey, president of the firm. Brenner continued, "We haven't seen very much of him since his return from Europe. A few meetings have been held with many more on the agenda before the ground breaking ceremonies will take place." Once, again Brenner assured Tele-Views that it would be "next week" before he could get things down pat to start construction at the tower site in the Silverton Hills. In view of the present delay, Tele-Views believes that the ground breaking and actual construction will begin around September 14-15. The National Association of Radio and Television Broadcasters is having a Northwest meeting in Seattle on September 14-15. Brenner express ed interest in attending this meeting, so the veep could tie in all duties in a single trip to the Northwest., YOURE FOR THE TELE-VIEWING TUESDAY The Toymaker, 3:45. The old German Toymaker brings his talcs of toys to delight 'he young of heart on this live chil dren show. Northwest News Digest, .5:45. Features hniman Wallace, newscaster, with Bill Stout as tor. Cross-country news and Newspaper of the Air, 5:55. Features Bill Clayton with local news and news photographs local and -live. It Happened in Sports, 6:30. Life story of Willie Hoppe, retired champion billiard playerl Hoppe will be interviewed on show. Mirror Theatre, 7:00. "The Happy Tingtr stars Ralph Meeker and Eve Marie Saint in a comedy concerning a TV writing team whose vocational efforts are temporarily frus trated because of romantic difficulties. Favorite Story, t. "Three Strangers' features Christian Larson and Bill Phipps. Adolphe Menjou as hosts, leads viewers through a storm to a switchman's hut where fugitives from a tied-up train have found shelter. Included are a hangman on his way to an execution of the young man a judge and his wife who believe the man is innocent a young hotheaded girl and another man. Nite Owl Theatre, 11:39. "Old Swimmin' Hole" with Jackie Moran, Marcia Mae Jones and Leatrice Joy. YOURS FOR TELE-VIEWING WEDNESDAY U.N. General Assembly, 12:30. Telecast live from head quarters In New York. Matinee Theatre, 2. "Woman Doctor." The Toymaker, 3:45. The old German Toymaker brings his tales of toys to delight the young of heart on this live children's show. ' Northwest News Digest, 5:45. Features Norman Wallace, newscaster, with Bill Stout as sports reporter and commenta tor. Cross-country and 'weather round-up by Wallace local, live. Newspaper of the Air, 5:55. Features Bill Clayton with local news and news photographs local and live. Fights, 6. Welterweight champion. Kid Gavilan of Havana vs. Ralph "Tiger" Jones of Yonkers, N.Y., In a 10-round bout from Madison Square Garden. Liberace, 7. Selections include: "Dizzy Fingers,' "Grieg MpHIpv" "Tenderlv." "A Maiden's Wish." 'Tschaikowsky ' . tl i lr- . DhutVim .1 . . 1 1 m.9A IS : WilHnnneri oiiartet are Buests nmsn' Mnh nlans to stage a diva walks out. Harry Lillis n.arance. ' This Is Your Life, 8:30. The life story of Rock Hudson. Kraft Theatre, 9. "Day of Vision" a story of faith stars Ilka Chase, John McGovern, Harry Townes, and Jack Arthur, stnrv concerns a woman and a group of children who see a vision that promises to return have developed in the lives ot we group aunng me years are suddenly resolved. ... . t - ' Orient Express, 10. "The Human Bond" is a psychopathic killer who is responsible for a series of off-screen killings completely without reason but which take place at the same hour and same day of each week at a series of places each one closer to Rome. Starring are Jean-Pierre Aumont and Cathy O'Donnell. Crusade In the Pacific, 11. (Part 22) The surrender and occupation of Japan. Episode includes the Russian entry Into the Pacific war, the surrender ceremony on the Missouri, and America's occupation of Japan. Nite Owl Theatre, 11:30. "Right Man" with Alan Ladd, Julie Bishop, and Edith Rellows. . On Television KPTV (Channel 27) TUESDAY MARR RADIO & TELEVISION Sales - Service - Installation TV Opf n from tvm. to 9 p.m. Ph. 2-1611 2140 8. ComL SaltnTi First Television Store 1.11 p m. 4Vrch for Tomorrow 1 JO P m.-Lov of Lift t:U p.m. Tormiker 4 00 p.m. Howd Doody 4:3' p ra. tf rtT Than FlfMen 1.00 p m. Nftmei thi Sim so p.m. Newipspcr of Air 00 p.m. Two for Monrr JO p.m. HiPptru In SporU 45 p.m. Nwi Cinvtn T:M p m Mirror TriroUr t JO p.m. Break Bank 5 00 p.m. Nftthint but bi I 30 pm. Thii U Tour Lift t oo p.m. Adolpha Manjou t 10 p m. Candy Thaatfr 10:10 p.m. Half Hour Tnestor U N p m Froitf Prollcs 11 ; p m. Nlia Owl WBONUDAY t It a m.What'f Ceotint 11:00 l.n.-Thi Bit Payoff 11:30 a m. Wticoma Travcltf 11:00 boob On Tour Account 12:30 p.m. UN Oenrl AJmbIy 1;M p.m. Doubio or Not hint 1:30 p ai. Atrlko It Rich l:O0 p.m. Mattnoo Tbcam l:ia pm BeareA for Tomorrow I 10 P B- Lort f Ufa THERE'S MONEY IN YOUR TREES WE PAY (ASH FOR GREEN (ONES LOOK NOW AT ALL DOUGLAS FIRS AND GRAND FIR TREES IN TOCR YARD, FASTl'RK ORWOODLOT. We. pay 14 cents per pound for Donrlas and 4 cents for Grand fir. Must be treeo and closed. When y.a have soma cones tend as a postal card and we'll come and buy them. ;TeLS5 WOODSEED 'far"' Views EtLACKMEE i sports reporter and comments weather round-up by Wallace. " - - !..... - Tin., fim!! mnA 4 V. of Fatti Page. Deneill ODera ana uie impuncu Crosby makes surprise ap- in zu years. i.ompncauora mat. OPEN HOUSE DATED Lebanon "Open House" is the theme selected by the mer chants' committee for fall opening here Sept 18-19. Most merchants will remain open until 9 p.m. the first night of the event. Bob Peterson, com mittee chairman, said the reg ular bargain day event is be ing included so that merchants selling items other than cloth ing can participate. The spe cial items will be offered for sale at the low bargain day price only from 7 to 9 p.m. on Sept. 18. 141 p.m. Toymakir 4 00 p m. Howdy DoOdr 1:00 p.m. fttriko It Rlcb 8: p.m. Newpaptr of Atf 00 p.m. Flihta $.ti p.m. Newt Oaravaa 7:00 p m. Llbrrac 7:30 pm Bcolt MuitC Hall 00 p.m. I Marrtrd Joan 30 p.m. Thla la Tour Lift 00 p.m. Kraft Thtr 10:00 p.m. Orient ExoreJi 10 JO p m. Half Hour TheaUr 11 00 p.m. Pacific Cruaadt U p.m. N1U Owl Theater n:ilvisiii. mvift t instaUaoh Molorali, Dumtnt, Hoftmin, IU Valley Television (enter 2303 Fitrjrtundi II Ph. 2-1913 Am tit Bfr In Bay 9m lb, Umi O..I ! T.w. fMlar. TrtM TwhaltUM dm cm D.ll. SIMM l.rtar 7. KISS FOR MOTHER n .a to ' u.. J m e'p- fee is.. H- r-ti..ls.C.il i J.AJ.Mmu. I L ii i-ii' a Boy Unconscious Following Mishap Lebanon Monty L. Meier, 9, was still unconscious Mon day afternoon in the commun ity hospital, 93 hours after be ing struck by a car while crossing the highway near his home north of the city. The deaf boy was hit when' he darted into the path of a car driven by Lloyd A. John son, 1839 West 16th street, Al bany, who, according to wit nesses in a nearby field, esti mated his rate of speed at 35 miles per hour. Johnson was pulling a trailer loaded with wood and the rear vehicle jack- DIRECTORY ADDHIO MACHINBS AD tnakaa aaod maehlBM aold. rtntod. npAlrod- Roan. 4M Court Ph 1-4T71 W do anythioc la th lino of bulM- lm . rrea oatlmatta. Pbona 1-0969. olll1 DRESSMAKING Alter aUooa. benutltchtnc, luttasi, buckiu coTorcn, bu.toaboiaa. lira. H. Allender. 3-9911. . olio BULLDOZING Bulldoalrtt, road, clcarlnc Vlrill Husktr, 1010 Fatrvltw, 1-3146. tetth. phont 033 a1 EXCAVATING Bco OUen oi Bon, excavating and iraolng. MBd cltarlnc. Ph. 1-3080. 031 BOUSE MOVING Ltvetlm, fouodatloD work. Full parlance. Praa catlmatu. Bondod and InrtrM' Pti.- I-IIOM. 3-7080.- 305' Iiuulatlon. weatheritrlpa, plumtnum acraena. FTta tatlmatao. T. Pullman Phopa o3l8' MATTRESSES Capitol Bedding raoofatea Btw matttMaet Ph. 1-4041 PoU Una o OPFICt rCENlTURB A SUPPU1S Deak ehalra. flltt. flllnt auppllca, aafaa. dupllcatora. aupplleii. dek lam pa, rp wrltar aunda. Roen. 45 Court ROAD GRADING Road aradlna. lerellni. dltchint. Ill cat cradcr, Roy Hancock. Ph. 3M18. O310 Roofln and aldlna br expert! for i rliht price. Phona 2-OW. pllT SEPTIC TANKS Hamel'a aeptle tanka cleaned. Una efTlca. Ouarantaed work. Phona 1-7404. J0J Mlke'a Septfe Berrlcc. Tanka cleaned. O'rooter altana aa war a, dralna. Phone J -H01 all! Bawer. aeptle tanka, dralna cleaned. Ro- M-Hoour sawer Barf lea Phono 1-U37 BHARPENING REPAIR Lawn mowera, aawt. at lttb m D Ph. 1-4818 Preo pickup. e TYPEWRITERS Smith, Corona, Ramtnttoa Royal. UO' darwood porUblea All makaa niad machlnea Repalrt rant. Roan. 45 Court 3-4771 c WINDOW CLEANING Acme Window Cleaners. Industrial floor um houaeclaanlng Phono S-1337 141 Conrl Looking Mam for At fhumiat. it's "v.," promptly u 4 out of S .in. ploy.il mm and women mar. ritd or tintl.. Th. loan it fitted, whar.ver ponibl., to yoat in dividual circumiunci. PlMn for 1 Visit Loan If you ar. in . hurry, a phon. call will .nabl. ut to ha v. varythinf rtady when you com. in. If mora conv.ni.nt, writ, or com. in. Sm for your. U why over a million popl. "If. lUrW to b. .r NOW! Loans apta $1500 Take ap fa 24 manias fa repay Uam up t. SI 300 , Crouml Froor Ontan Bids. 105 S. HIGH STREET Fhonei 2-24M a Salem, Ore. NarriM k Rntwrr, ttt MiNhm am m $100 ma4 br fmim Kaa, Warrant Officer Dwight Coxe, of Fresno, Calif., ex POW who arrived yesterday, from Xorea, kisses his mother, Mrs. Frances Coxe, of Portland, Ore. Coxe was met by his wife, Maybelle (his right), six children, two grandchild dren, a daughter-in-law, a future son-in-law and nis mother. Coxe was one of 328 ex-POWs returned home aboard the Nelson M. Walker, that brought the fir it repatriates home by sea. (AP Wirephoto) photo) knifed when he applied the J near Gore school. The attend brakes in an effort to avoid the 1 inff nhvsirian rriA MnnH child. The boy Js the son of Mr and Mrs. Willie H. Meier who live bu wouldn't buy a suit without trying it on ... Before You Trade For Any M4fi mmm mm&3m. mim COMPARE BEAUTY! Feast your eyes on the sparkling continental Styling of Pinin Farina, famous cus tom car designer. Then take the keys and DR1VE1 COMPARE THE AIRI Nash Weather Eye, world's best heating and ventilating system, thermc sutically controls filtered sir. Sii lSfZj V 0 L I 11 In a fcaio-r p- g ii. ; AMSSno lAMILM r- -r j that the boy showed some Im- provement but that his injuries 1 are serious. V COMPARE ROOMI You can prove to yourself with the tape-meuure that Nash seats, both front and rear, ait the widest in any car. Then check front . and rear head room! COMPARE HANDLINOI With exclusive Nash Airfles Front Sus pension, plus optional new Power Steering, parking is li", easier. STATESMAN - OUR DEMONSTRATORS ARE WAITING 17TractsofO&C Timber to Be Sold .William C. Guernsey, ra tional administrator of the Bureau of Land Management, announced today at Portland that 17 tracts ot O&C timber. totaling o2.90o.000 board feet, and seven tracts of public do main timber, tdtallng J.065. 000 board feet will be offered for sale during September. The timber ii located in Polk, Lane, Lino, Tillamook wade Linn, Lane, Tillamook, Clack amas, Douglas, Coos Joseph, ine and Jackson counties Ore- Ion. First O&C sale ot the month will be held on September 2, at Roseburg. One tract of 8,- 300,000 board feet will be of fered for oral bidding. On September 3, Eugene plans to invite bids on three tracts, total volume 4,819,000 board feet. Two tracts will be offered by oral bidding and one tract by sealed bidding. Salem, Coos Bay, and Med ford will each hold sales on September 4. Salem will offer six tracts totaling 21, 856,000 board feet, lour tracts by oral bid and two by seal ed bid. Coos Bay will Invite oral bids on three tracts, total volume 20,828,000 board feet. Medford will offer 7.205,000 board feet located in four tracts, one of which wlil be bid on orally. Three sales of public do main timber will be held on September 4 at Coo Bay, Medford and Salem. Coos Bay will ask for sealed bids on one tract of timber totaling 1 iday a Cap Car, Take This 10 TJilo ComparisonTrip COMPARE VISION I Look ahead, look around, Nash gives you the widest windshield and rear window, the greatest eye level risibility. COMPARE THE RIDEI Drive a Nash over the roughest road. Prove to yourself Nash hu the "world's finest shock-proof ride." CHOOSE MARION MOTORS 1.093,000 board feet Med ford will invite sealed bids on two tracts, totaling 1,994,000 board feet and Salem will offer 1.147,000 board feet by sealed bids. One tract of 91,000 board feet will be offered by the western Washington office lo cated at Swan Island, Port land, on September IB. An other Public Domain timber sale will also be held on Sep tember 18 at Bend where two tract totaling 738,000 board feet will be offered by oral bid. Guernsey said that 10 par cels of O&C Umber were sold during August for f 130,648.99. Successful bidders were: Alsea Lumber company, Alsea; Glen E. Park, Estacada; Fischer Lumber company, Marcola; Mult Lumber company, Junc tion City; Ronald P. Snell strom and Montgomery & Spencer, both of Eugene; also The Long-Bell Lumber com pany of Eugene; A. J. Rackley, Springfield; and The Robert Dollar company, G lendale, Oregon. LEGALS - NoTirt to caioiToaa IH THI CIRCUIT COURT Or THI STATS OF OI'.MION FOR THS COUNTY Of MARION. Hi prob.u Mumter U.M1, id la, matur at th, HUH r Maidalana Hay, Bdmuton, oeaMd, mollc, U bT br .ivw that Paul MH,r ha, km duly appointed adnlnutralar e( lh, wtata ot MatdaUna Elm Kdmutoo. drcawd. br order of th. Circuit Court of tho atata of Or it on for Marlon Couo tr 4aUd Aiuut I. MU. AU ptrtooi bartna claim, atilut aald oitau ar. ncrobr rMulrod to prai.nl auca clalma dulr r,rin,d and vtth proper vcru'tca- tloa attached to lha uaorlano4 al Ml N. HKh atrott, Salra. Orau vluila COMPARE TRAVEl FEATURESI No car gives you so many features to make travel more fun even extra luggage space I ' t COMPARE tUXURYIThe only car in which you can get Reclining Seats. Ideal on long trips. You can doze the miks away while someone drives. v . , . . v . .jw r v ix ji THE ONE YOU WANT TO DRIVEI AfaOt Momta DMtkm ftaia-aVMaaur CorporarbM, (Mnll, Mirk. -PHONE NOW! ON SHIP y f I 7- Amos T. Snowalter, mid shipman, - son of Mr and -Mrs. William B. Snowalter, Chemawa, Oregon, sends Morse code message by . blinker light aboard tho battleship, USS Iowa, where he is training as a member ' ot the NROTC. Showalter is with the NROTC at Ore-' gon State college and has been on a summer training cruise to European water. The squadron is slated to return to Norfolk, Vs., Sep tember 3. (U.S. Navy Photo) ' Ix month, from tho 6.t, of thla aotloa. tha asm, holnc daud ana aubltihod far thofim lino thla Ktk 4u ef Atmat, fact. Miasm. Admmiatratet - ZLMER M. AUDHDSOR, Altornav fa &h K.l.t Data af flm publication. Auauat 14. It U. Data af lait publication. JMjptebet St. leU. Aui . JS. ,pt. t, . H. St. There are big differences in cars today. Before you buy any new car you ' . ought to drive it Yes, we invite comparison. We welcome it. Because in just 10 mues we can show you the greatest value in American cars. So, don't buy any new car without making' a thorough comparison. And when you compare, compare with Nash ; and drive a Nash. We'll show you performance, economy, comfort and - -above all, value that you can't equal anywhere else. COMPARE STRENGTH AND SAFETY! The world's safest car with double-rigid Nash Airflyt Construction. You ride protected by a fortress of stecL COMPARE ECONOMYI More mites to the gallon say thousands of Nash owners. Discover the amazing performance of the Nash"Le Mans Dual Jet-Fire engine. 333 Center Ph. 39286 K t MaviM Comty Mdar I. ldM laoa Caaiaaain Act of Or. 90. '"" af all m mm tw lima a m . It)