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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1946)
r 4 f Mid-Willanietlc Valley .., Frm Tfce Slnlrtmmm'$ Valley Mill Clty-Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Lake have been railed to M Rae, Mont, by the unexpected death cf her father, Leone Cain, guest t the Lakes, ha returned to her . Des Moines, Iowa home. Fairfield.- Junior Reserve of the Fairfield local -will hold a no host picnic at Fail field grange hall Sunday, June 16. Members will bring their scrap books to work on in the morning. Ice cream will be furnished at noon and all children 8 to 14 years of the' Fairfield, St. Louis and Elder- edge districts are invited. - i . v Sflverteo Oscar Woare of Port land. brother of Ed Woaie. is fll with a heart ailment in Provi dence in Portland and has been there nine weeks. Bethel The Rev. S. Hamrick underwent a major operation at Salem General hospital Thursday and ii in a very serious condition and no visitors are admitted. Mill City Forrest Berry of . Clear Creek. Calif, is here to Spend the cummer with friends au relatives here. Maxine Hill is his daughter. Lebaaen The annual school meeting will be held in the high school auditorium, Monday, June 17. The annual report will be read at 2 p.m. and polls will be open from 20 to 7 for the election pf m director for a five year term. J. H. Irvine's term, is expiring this year. - j Lebanon Vacation Bible schools were held in several lo cal churches' this week and will continue through June 21. The wot k is planned for children from 4 to 14, or those in the first six grades of grammar school. Five . churches are cooperating. Church of Christ, Church of God, and Methodist and Baptist. Sirrerton-The Municipal swim ming pool opens Monday. Clar ence Davenport, World War II veteran will, be life guard. The pool has been cleaned, bleachers for - spectators ha ve been added and a few minor repairs made. v Macleay Mr. and! Mrs. W. A. Jones, Mr. and Mrs.! Harry Mar tin. sr -and Mrs. Edith Wilson have returned - from the state Grange convention in Baker. . Klckey Mrs. A. C. Parsons nd sons G rover and Bill of Salinas, Calif., are. visiting the M. M. Ma gees. Parsons' formerjy owned and operated a farm here. ITS BROKE? GET 'EB FIXED! Expansion VYatrh Bands Smoothly Repaired in JusC I 1 Days. Reasonably! 1995 8.12th Street Texaee Service Station Miller's - Notion Dept. I jj: & i 0 , important from California to Leao'tng fashion designers Jictate the chic tee-square shoulder for very I rthine you wear. Insist Specially moulded, jf T&Sk mvight, tkttr mtt, slip o ere pclUf urvJ fit lae J? rJr kmljr smugly. Pmlr, 135 J mmZMmA I - I'.ttmumity t lrm ptimtirnt 98 Attend Picnic Of Zcna Pioneers LINCOLN Ninety-eight old timer and newcomers attended the Lirt-Zena pioneer reunion at the Mickey farm at Lmcoln June 9. The oldest oresent was Albert M. Patrick, 85, of Zena and the youngest. Bobby Washburn, four months old son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Washburn of Zena. The oldest women present were Mrs. L. E. Penrose, 84, and Mrs. J. D. Walling, 84. Lois Crawford whise grandpar ents crossed the plains to Oregon in 1846 was elected president it succeed Carle Abrhms, the first woman ever elected. L. I. Mickey' was reelected as vice president and Mr. Frank Windsor succeeded Hazel Price, secretary -treasurer." Standing committees for the coming year are. dinner, Mr. and Mrs. Worth Henryi Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kime and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hunt. Mrs. L. I. Mickey; program. Hazel D. Price and Mrs. Abrams. Singing was led by Guy Phillips of Portland, a monologue was given by Carl Boehringer. Those preaent were. Col. and Mrs Carle Abrams. Mr. and Mr. Worth Henry. Mr and Mm. Guy Phillips. Mr. and Mrs. rrank Windsor. Mrs. J. D. Wallinf. Let U la Abrams. Mr. and Mrs. K. W. Hartltt. Karl and Nancy Meart. Anna Boehrlnser,. Robert C. Abrams. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Crawford. Dar Irnf lone. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Boehr inger, Lois Crawford and Jean and Peggy Crawford. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Entrees. Mr. and Mrs. James A. French. Mrs. Leishton Holier. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Oilders. Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Bar- J er. ar. ana nn. v-n wnnnntr, H. Barker. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Nekton. Mrs L. E. Penrose. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Thelin. Mrs. Lawrence MrClure and Donna and l.arry. Bob ett Yungen. Mr and Mrs Walter Klme and Norma and Linda, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hunt and Ins. Martha. Albert and Virginia Williams. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Basting and Patsy. Fred and Leonard. Mr. and Mrs. . Harold Wash bum and Bobbv and Hal, Mrs. Justlnna Kildee. Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Hunt. Albert M. Patrick. Mrs. Emma Wood. Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Neiger. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Cherry. Mr. and Mrs. L. I. Mickev. John and Casey Hod -rlguer. Mrs. Fanny F.lmel. Mr: and Mrs. Leo White. Iner Mortehson. Mrs. Ber tha Garrow. Beverly Molt. Mr. and Mrs. John Sehindler. Leo Mitchell. S. B. Dodge and Robert. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shepard and Darla. Hazel D. Price. Clifford and Fred Fox. Howard -Lumlv. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Burns and Ted. Jr. Tlioinpsoii. larlow Vie, OCA -Finals PORTLAND, Ore , June 14-UP) Don Thompson, Newberg. unat tached entry, and Tom Marlow, Eastmoreland of yrtland, will clash tomorrow for the 1946 Ore gon Golf association crown. Thompson downed Bob Duden, Santa Ana, Calif., Country club, 8 and 6, in today's semi-finals. Marlow ousted Joe Ahern, Alder wood of Portland, 5 and 4. Babe Freese, Portland, will meet Gracie DeMoss, Corvallia. for the women s crown. Nov York on 4 beautifully ide Hollywood Shoulder Pads On 5kouUer PJ Bo.J.Ve. Sec. King to Let Northwest Decide CVA PORTLAND. Ore, June 14-7P From morning until night a great parade of Portland area spokes men told Interior Secretary Jtiliu A. Krug : liere today what they hope for the northwest and what they think :ot proposed develop ments. The burly secretary began the day with f a; press conference and then opened; his doors to conserva tionists, reclamationists. flood con trol advocates and just plain citi zefTs. . 'i He plahned to fly tonight to Aberdeen, Wash , for a similar apiiearance 'in that lumber and fishing city. ;but bad flying weath er caused cancellation. A group sponsored by the Pa" cific Northwest Development as sociation told him they oppose the proposed Columbia valley author ity. insisting that development cari be handled best by existing agen cie. i Krug declined to commit hiirv self on the proposed CVA et up. He said: "We must have co4 ordinated development of this big power system. Frankly, I don't know whether an authority -will give you, anything better than; you have how." The northwest must work out its own power needs now for 1950 and later, he continued. He in sisted he Was here to find oit what the people want. "I don't care what I considered best." he concluded, "if the peo ple don't want it, it's got three strikes on it already." c Fined SI 00 for Slugging Drew PORTLAND. June 1 4 T A deputy sheriff who admitted slug-; ging a fugitive murderer after he was arrested and handcuffed, was fined $100 ifj circuit court todayjs ' He was! Bob Dillon, and his vic tim was John Drew, sentenced to life imprisonment for the slaying of another -: deputy sheriff, Al; Bowe. Drevf escaped from the county jail. was recaptured; east of Pirtla)rrtfoy a posse whih included Diflferi. Judge Jamts Bain said the fine was heavier than would have' been implosd on a civilian be cause Di I Bon was an officer of the; law. He eoncede1 that the assault; was understandable because Dil-" Ion had worked under Bowe. Unions Uphold Referendum ASTORIA.: June 14-iF)-A pro posed changt in the group's con stitution 'which would have elect ed officers instead f choosing them by referendum, was turned down beforejthe state Federation of Labor convention closed here today. j Decision to retain the present method came, by a close vote, af ter lengthy discussion. W. J. En tress, Salem. team engineers del egate, asserted the change would allow officers to dominate the convention because delegates might "lose their jobs" unless they followed instruction from above. He said the referendum was the most democratic way to obtain members' viewpoints. Bolivia Revolt Unsuecessfiil BUENOS AIRES. June 14Pl- A revolt in taiPaz. Bolivia, against the government of President Gaul- be! to Villarrotl was put down yesterday. Art undetermined num ber were killed and mounded. The unsuccessful coup was staged by a group of young civil ians and army officers who used two airplanes-Un an effort to bomb out police headquarters in the cap ital. : (A dispatch from Santiago said that a lieutenant and a brigadier of the Bolivian air force arrived in Arica, Chile, tonight from La Paz and were, quoted as saying a large number of persons were kill ed during the La Paz air bombard ment.) SEVEN IN HANDICAP SEATTLE, 1 June 14-(P)-Wil- liam Pigott's Antelope was as signed top weight of 120 pounds as seven horses were nominated today for the $5000 six-furlong Inaugural, Handicap, top race in tomorrow s opening Longacres program. , LEWIS FACES COl'RT F1GIIT WASHINGTON, June 14 A large part of the bituminous cral industry J went to court yes-j nrday to restrain the government from making a contract with John j L Lewis . covering superv isory mine workers One Croup Of All Season Suils oday Smart Shop 115 BT. Liberty iVeit; Streamliner Wrecked I T - ... f0S,!i2l0 g POWHATAN. W.Vgu. Jane 14 The eagineer and flresnaa were killecl whea this leeeaMtlv aad twe ears ef the Nerfolk & Western's aew streamlined Tewhataa Arrsw" left the track ea a sharp eerve at Powhatan. W.Va. Backled rail ia picture was tor a from anettaer track by the wreck. (Al WIKE-PHOTO) Diaper Expert Lays Shortage to Substitute Decline, More Babies By Arthur Edsen WASHINGTON. June 14-OP)-A dapper diaper man' said today that things look better on the baby britches front this summer, but he warned: Ixxik out for another long, cold winter. John J. Jones, president of the National Institute of Diaper Ser vices, told a news conference that he was speaking only for the one baby in ten in this nation who wears diapers furnished by the service. , . , . . , a j nings are looxing up ior inese i kids (who live chiefly in cities of at least 100.000 population). That's because, he said. 20 per itiiI of the service subscribers are leaving for long summer u ca lions. 1 Waiting List "We'll be able to fill up our waiting lists at last," he said. No, he didn't know what, if anything, the kids would wear while vacationing. Jones said the diaper situation is rough for all the 2.600.000 babies born in the U. S. each year. "More diapers are being made man ever ueiore, ne saui. uui we still flou t have enough. - He laid the shortage on jwo things: ,1. More babies. 2. Lack of diaper substitutes. Where." he asked, "can you find a flour sack today?" I'ses Handkerchief 'j Jones whiffed an elegant white j 1 handkerchief out of his breast ; y jxx-ket and proceeded to show a r method of setting mote mileage uui ii uir u isj ivti a uuit eaivr an- able. 1 Take the opposite corners -of j me diaper and ioid mem in so that it resembles a take the bottom tip a up so that it reaches what would be the cross piece of the kite. Turn down the top. Plop the youngster down and pin him in. It's Jones' contention that this gives additional thickness In the middle, or business, portion Of the 1, j t. . , . special placement officer for han Had he ever tried the method , J , " ci it c out personally? "Heavens, no," said the man who does the baby's washing. "I'm not a family man." Valley Obituaries William Edmund Inrrahara INDEPENDENCE, June 14 Funeral services for Wljiam Ed mund Ingraham, 69, Who died Wednesday in Salem, wiU be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the First Baptist f church in Amity. The Rev. Earl Cochran of McMinn- ville. Burial will be in the family lot in Amity and In charge of Smith-Baum. Born in Belmore, Ontario, Can ada, July 2, 1876. Survivors are the widow, Lela Samuels Ingra ham, two daughters. Mildred M. Olsen and Esther Taege. all of Portland: a daughter. Ruth A. Dow. Olympia; and one son.'Rol- land O. Ingraham, San Diego. William E. Eisenhart SILVERTON, June 14 Funer al services for William C. Eisen hart, 74. who died at his home at 702 N. Second st. Thursday, will be- held from the Ekman Memorial home Sunday at 3 p m. with interment at Bethany ceme tery. He died following a heart attack, having been stricken the evening before after returning from a day's work. Born here May 12, 1872. he iived here all his life. Survivors are a sister. Mrs. Juliia Hutton. with whom he made his home, and a brother Fred, both of Sil verton. sea For Your Cherry nn This bomb is deigiiel to cover your rherrv tree; no machinery necetarv. It explores from a mortar. e Full instructions flnillel by ileal er Xhis method is in accord with the local Rjiray program. 120 North Commercial St. Blair Industrial Sit First National Wheat -Crop Claimed' Better Than Average PORTLAND. Ore.. June 14 -7P) The fexieral division of agricul tural statistics today forecast a northwest wheat crop of nearly a third greater than! average. The division said the crop in Oregon. Washington and Idaho .probably would total 127.612 000 uuMiru ii pei eoi me j narvesi ann oi per ceru ntKivf the 10-year average, tmi- cials attributed me increase to greater acreage rather than heav ier yield. yield. I TheTSountiful harvest, predict- ed at 23.954.000 bushels in Ore- gon. will help meet the grain shortage and aid overseas relief. A crop of 24.400 tens of sweet cherries a 3600-ton increase was predicted for Oregon., but a: 10 x-r cent drop from last year was seen for Washington. Ore-: goo's oats and biiiley crops were exjected to be below last year. nem in so ; a 1 r JdhTtMallery to Aid Handieapped Unemployed A. L. Mallery, senior employ ment officer, has been assigned as .employment service office report ed Friday. t. Mallery will work In coopera tion with Robey S. Ratcliffe, vet erans employment representative, and Carlton BGreider, veterans counselor, in interviewing and placing handicapped veterans. No special solicitation for Jobs for handicapped workers is con templated until the need becomes greater, the office said, but great er emphasis is being placed on placement of handicapped work ers, but veteran and non-veteran, in suitable employment. Many Salem employers are co operating with the program for handicapped workers, the USES office declared. Local employers have shown interest in a report based on a nationwide survey which Indicates that handicapped veterans on the job have higher ratings than regular Svorkers in efficiency and absenteeism and lower ratings in injury and turn over. ' Billy to Warble After Title Fight LOS ANGELES, Jane H-OTV-Ileavyweight Challenger Billy Cean la confidently leaking for ward te a profitable sideline ef singing eewbey and hillbilly aenrs "after I lick Joe Leal." Coast Records. Inc.. which made Cean an offer ef S35.M a year to make western recordings If he defeats the etiamplea. said the ehallenser wired his accept ance today from his Greenwood Lake, NJ, training ramp. Fruit Fly Use HARDWARE CO. Laboratories, Inc. Bank Bldg Salem on Curve 1 x Group Seeks International Marine Board SEATTLE. June 14-(P)-A spokesman for the workers' group in the world maritime conference said today its fight for an inter national shipping authority will be carried to the conference floor regnrdles of what action the reso lutions committee takes on the issue. The committee, which must act on the proposal before it can get on the conference agenda, has not yet tackled the question. The spokesman said that, if the committee refuses to report favor ably, the resolution will be brought to the attention of the conference by one of the worker delegates. The proposed resolution has I drawn fire from Secretary of : j,,r Schwellenbach, a US govern ment delegate and from govern ment and employer delegates from other nations. C If ! Ilttll B Dam Opposition WASHINGTON, DC. June 14 (At -The senate heard arguments of Oregon and Washington fish enthusiasts today that dams in rivers leading to the Pacific should be far enough upstream to permit salmon to run. The arguments were contained in a letter from Ben Paris, Seat tle sportsman, read into, the rec ord by Senator Magnuson (D- Wash.) A t m Values To $20.00 Ml oi 441 Court Street The Oregon Stcrteamcm. Salem. Oregon State Freshman Tells Of Being Abducted at Gunpoint SEATTLE, June 14-(4-)-Tlomas R. May lock, Oregon Siate ru! lege freshman home for vacation, launched a manhunt tonight hin he told police he; had been abducted at i gunpoint by a man he at temped to befriend after an areident. ' f , Blaylock, 19. told Sheriff Harlan S.. Callahan he was walking near his home this morning when he saw a tar Irsi the ditch and sp- proached it to offer aid. There , ' r- " 1 ' " wsi a man in th,e car, he il, j , s g, , m wearing black gloves "but I could , f liia-af 4if fillf Hills' see his right hand had ben vjIIILID ViUIUIIiUy smashed or cut his glove was oozing XoCd." He also was bleed ing from a wound in the leg, Blaylock said. Pickup Order Callahan, who issued a state wide pickup order for the uniden- tified man, quoted Blaylock as saying he got t out his father's car to take the man to a hospital. On the way, the man suddenly pulled a gun and forced Blay- lock, the youth said, to drive through Tacoma and Olympia and around the Olympic- pen in- sula to Port Angrles, where the man jumpea irom me car aner warning Blaylock not to talk. Arrested far .K peed ins During the ride he was arretle.1 j by a Shelton policeman for speed- j ing. Blaylotk said, and posted ! $ro for bond. He told Callahan he was afraid to mention his pre dicament to the officer as the gun- , man "had threatened to kill roe." ; "Besides, he added, "I was , mad at the cop." He described the man as dark of complexion, about 33, weih- ing 160 pounds and five feet ' eight inches in height. During the ride the man told me he was on the spot," Blay lock told the sheriff. "He said he'd been snot in a brawl witn a mam over a woman in Edmonds. I was sure taken in." OOr FAVORM LABOR C'I'RIlS WASHINGTON. June 14 V- Republican open forums an nounced a tabulation of 1500 ballots on labor policy rhowed a large majority of forum mem bers regarded Itibor unions as 'too strong. Many favored legal curbs, including repeal of the Wagner act. 1 MAKE IT A HERE'S TRAVEL. ADVENTURE FOR Going abtoad seeing tights you nay never tee otherwise - is just one ad vantage of f nlisring in the new Regular Army. Over three-quarter of a million Vont Office Building Salem, Oregon ,t tew Choice Of The House fhe Sonnet ws I Flowers, Feathers and Ribbons i Ore Saturdcrf. J one IS, 13 U 3 Winning Skein WENATCHEE, June I4-.IV A five-run spree in the last tr inninrs m a v a the Wanatr hf e 1 . .... . - , , v. " . couver Ca pi llanos, a 3L edge in their Western Interna.! ial lra ! aeries here tonight and a ; virtual tie with Salem for f.rtt 1 pi-r, m the standings. , Th wjn WM j Vivaldaa) nmth against two losses (h.s yi sr. Vanceuver Ml XM tlt-I I 3 WeaaUhee . ! I1k-4 t Paliea, Jebaaea CD and Bren ner; Vlvalda aad I Itigerald. Pre-Warl Service on Waichnepairing Diamond Setting , Jetvtlry j ' Manufacturing Mar Ilaara: t.li te I r.M. MILLION !' Yys have joined tip already. MAKE IT A MILLION t Full facts are at your near est Army Camp or Post, or j U. S. Army Recruiting ; Station. , i Shop's ! Salmp Oregon mm