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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 4, 1939)
Lfct OaLGON STATESMAN, SaksvDrejcn, Sunday Mcrcia;, Jrxe 4, 123 . PAGE THREE Miclde Makes' Daiiy 'Shifts Improvement of Program for Dairy - Industry - Is Reason New appointments and shifts In the personnel of the state de partment of agriculture affect ins ' many sections of the state were announced Saurday by J. D. Mickle. state director of ag riculture. Most of the changes were made to permit the department tc launch an extensive dairy quality Improvement program, officials said. The program :s designed to help the Oregon $20,000,000 dairy industry meet the strin gent requirements of a ne fed eral batter scoring regulation. Klxoo for Marion Milk and cream supervisors have been appointed for many of the western Oregon covnties. Frank Nixon, formerly of 'heri dan creamery, has been appoint ed milk and cream supervisor in Marion and Clackamas coun ties. Hans Self ors, department district representative stationed at North Bend has been trans ferred to superviso.-y work in Coos and Curry counties for the summer months. Selfors' regu lar duties will be taken -ver by Dan Young,. Corvallis. Young has done shipping inspection work for the department during previous summers Aage Gribskox, district repre sentative at Union, will do the creamery inspection work in Baker, Wallowa and Union coun ties. His regular work will be taken over by Clyde Hutching, one of the department's shipping point inspectors. Other department milk and cream supervisors who have been named previously are Joseph A. Gray for Jackson and Josephine counties and Lloyd R. Jackson for Polk, Yamhill and Washing ton counties. The supervisory work is an en tirely new activity of he state department of agriculture in most counties. Ralph Schwab, Mt. Aut,el, was named the department's assist ant representative Marion county. The Marlon county dis trict man is Bryant 'Williams, recently transferred from similar duties in Yamhill and Tillamook counties. ' ' Williams' former territory 'is also being" taken over-by another new appointee, Henry J." Plumb. Plumb will also have charge of all department law 'enforcement work in Polk county. Japanese Prevent Neutrals Leaving HANKOW, China, June Z-JPi-rhe Japanese army tonight blocked efforts of neutrals to leave this Japanese-occupied city anese-occupied city iSri?? tor Shanghai Yangtze rivet The at my was adamant, despite ipecial permission granted by Jap inese naval officials to the neu trals to leave aboard the steamers which brought supplies here for units of the British Yangtze pa trol. The army's stand was alleged to have been in retaliation for the re cent action lot two American gun boats in taking a group of neu trals, including soviet Russian embassy officials, to Shanghai. A large number of neutrals have been endeavoring in vain to leave Hankow but the Japanese have objected although Japanese cargo shlps have been running regularly between here and Shanghai car rying Japanese. Those seeking to leave include the American vice consul and na tionals of France, Germany, Rus sia and Half. , The army's action further em bittered already strained relations between the military and the neu trals. The order to halt the de partures came as the British steamers were taking on baggage which the Japanese forced them to return to the shore. 2 Die, 9 Injured In Rail Accident RANGER. Texas, June Z-S-JL westbound Texas and Pacific pas senger train was derailed today at Colony, Fork, four miles west of here, killing two and injuring nine persons. . ' - - - " t J. N. Jaco of Eastland, chiet mall, clerk, said - the express eat and . the I baggage car-' hurtled . in the air and fell on top of the en gine and that two p a s j e n g e r eoachestturned over on their sides. The dead were Engineer L. M. Mann. fiS. and - Fireman Ernest Preston, 45, both pf Fort Worth.; - Most of the nine, were not in jured seriously..- iv Wo. 55295' if: ---,'V - ST1- A " l V. j, v ifv, 'it , I ' ' ' y 0tttg0Km& easli'''4 This picture of Thomas J. Penuer- gast, Kansas City democratic boss, was made at the federal penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kas., where he is serving a sen tence for income tax evasion, and was released by the depart ment of justice. Interstate Trade Barriers Decried Sprague Says no Good Can Come From Tendency now Evident MILTON, Ore., June 3-(JP)-Tis-approval of the growing tendency of states to throw up barriers against interstate trade was voiced by Gov. Charles A. Sprague of Oregon in an address today at the third annual Milton pea festi val. "I am glad our legislature turn ed down an effort to set up a bar rier in behalf of one crop (Wil lamette valley berries) because there can come no lasting good from trade barriers,'.' Sprague said. The governor commended this region for utilizing local resources in an effort to solve its own econ omic problems, pointing to the rel atively recent pea growing and pea canning industry, which today'B festival celebrated. During the day the Walla Walla Wagon Wheelers, fun-booster body, initiated Sprague and found him good-naturedly adamant against an oath to "work for a sales tax for Oregon." "What you fellows really want is for me to wheel the sales tax out of Washington," he retorted. n i Plea for Simple life Wins Award EUGENE. June 3-UPV-An elo quent plea for a return to the sim ple way of life, based upon plain, fundamental truths, won for George L. Hall, Ashland, the first prize of $150 in the annual Fail-ing-Beekman oratorical contest, held tonight as one of the events of the University of Oregon's 62nd commencement. Second prize of $100 was won by Howard E. Kessler, Eugene, who spoke on "The Graduate Looks at Life." Hall's topic was "Man and the Magic Mirror." Honorable mention was. accord ed the other two contestants, Adda Laura Bryant. Eugene, and Zane Kemler, Pendleton. Prelect toddi TRUE-TEMP lsw - ... II I - l! 1,1 - Cold alone is not enough to keep all foods at their test. Humidity alao U needed especiaHy fee meats, fresh frttits and vegetables. But, with humidity, it is more important than ewer that you HOLD the tight degree of cold in your refrigerate otherwise : mold and bacteria mar form rapidly in the mois ' ture laden air. ' , " ; - With the new TRUE-TEMP Cold Control, Westinghouse protects you against the 1' hazard of food temperature fluctuations. It holds temperatures CONSTANT in aU parts of ' , T the refrigerator, makes possible the new Food Protection QmN-TEMP-UtTC" 5 zones of cold providing com&? protection for mil your foods. See these new features today! - v. c te Can DeliVer to You a Brand New Big Westinghouse for Only . 0JC) Per Month ' 96 Boys Leave: To Visit Fair Future Farmers to? Make Trip Aboard Special to San Francisco Ninety-six boys from Salem and vicinity will board a Future Farm ers of America special train Tues day morning on a six-day trip to San Francisco and the Golden Gate international exposition, Earl R. Cooley, state director of agricul tural education, announced last night. He said altogether 400 boys from 42 Oregon schools will be on the special. Included in those 'boarding the train here will : be It Oregon Statesman carriers, who earned the outing by selling SO three- month subscriptions each to this newspaper. They will be accom panied by Harold G. Pruitt, circu lation manager. 23 Teachers Go Jens Svinth. agriculture in structor, C. A. Guderian, machine shop instructor, and Floyd Sieg mund, mechanical drawing In structor, of the Salem high school faculty will be among the 23 Ore gon teachers who will aid Cooley and his assistant, Ralph Morgan, in escorting the 400 young trav elers. The train will leave Portland Tuesday morning and after pick up stops enroute, Including Wood- burn, will stop in Salem and then depart for the south at 10:11 a.m. Cooley said those entraining here would include 11 boys from Amity, 16 from Salem, 15 from Cloverdale, three from Silverton, 12 from Independence, five from Newberg and 12 from McMinn vllle. Six will catch the train at Woodburn. The tour party will return home next Sunday. $2000 Fund Begun For Student Loan EUGENE, June .-!Pf-K grant of $2,000 to the University of Ore gon for a general student loan fund was voted today by the State Association of University of Ore gon Women who met on the cam pus during commencement activi ties today. With this sum ..the- Association of Women has two -loan funds op erating for a- total of $7,000. Announcement was also made today of the establishment of a Robert Bailey memorial fund by the graduating class of 704 sen iors. The money, to be derived from voluntary relinquishment of de posit fees by the seniors, will be temporarily placed in the ' loan fund, but will eventually become part of the university's permanent endowment. The exact sum will not be known for several days, although it will be several thousand dollars. Bailey, the son of Justice and Mrs. J. O. Bailey, Portland, waa president 'Of the senior class. He was drowned -in the millrace in a canoe accident on Easter Sunday. Wild Ducks Make Speedy Comeback WASHINGTON, June 3.-fl5)- Wild ducks, which a few years ago faced extinction, are making a comeback. The bureau of biological sur vey reported today that field workers observed approximately 14.225,000 birds in mid-January, compared with 12.22S.000 last year and 900,000 In 1937. The inventory covered 25 to 30 per cent of the nation's waterfowl. the bureau estimated. The increase was credited to restoration and conservation of waterfowl habitat and enforced regulations on hunting. wish Ac mw Cold Control TwoVHitesStav rAaJSsi" jjdiflunsQsUjt . Volcanic Regions SEATTLE, - Jane l-(JPt-Two white residents of remote Perry vllle, Alaska, remaining there alone after natives departed in fear of a volcanic "fire god," reported erupting Mount Veni aminof continued today to spout fire, smoke and ashes. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Johnson wirelessed a cannery tender re moved the last native residents to fishing camps, where others Lad gone previously. The Johnsons kept close watch of the volcano, ready to radio the coast guard cutter .".orris for aid if necessary. Halfton Burgh, who lived at Perryville with his wife 11 rears before moving here, said Father Hubbard, famed "glacier Priest," had climbed the volcano's cone and found the main crater 20 miles in circumference. - "The natives at PerryTille have been Christianized," Burgh said, "but when we were there they still used to think a great "fire god' dwelt in the volcano. The women and girls used to wear boudoir caps in the belief that this helped to keep the spirit of the volcano from get ting angry.' Courthouse Wires Are now Modern Old-style open wire electric wir ing in Marion county's jail in the courthouse basement was replaced yesterday by a modern conduit system, Sheriff A. Bnrk an nounced. The new system is less subject to tampering and to cause fires. The ceilings of the corridors In front of the two jail cell rows were covered with sheet iron re cently after prisoners had set fire to newspapers stuffed in ventilat ing holes. 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