!tttlllllJliiimtl!!l!t!flMM!n!Htlf(fm 11 The Stort mem, Salem, Owqon. Sunday, May t. 1948 Oregon Key State in Rural Housing Study By LIMe L. Madsea Firm Editor. Th Sutcmmaa CORVALL1S, May 8 Oregon has been named the key state in the extensive western rural hous ing study, a national research project, being conducted under the agricultural research act of 1948, popularly known aS the Hope Flannagan act. It is recalled that Oregon is also the key state for the western nutritional study pre viously announced and now under way. Miss Maude Wilson, professor of home economics research and housing specialist at Oregon State college, has been made regional chairman for the western states In this new project. Objectives of the study are three fold. Miss Wilson explains. First is to find by actual calls on selected farm families the facts about their housing needs and de sires. Next will be to apply labora tory studies to these facts and work out various standards of space and arrangements for use In nlnninl rural knm4 Ttl t KJ rH step will be to take the facts and ph Purposes, citing the recent standards determined in the field begun archive at University of -r,H bhnr.fnrv .,Hi and de- ! veiop d series of actual house plans I from them which will be most use ful in rural -vestrn United States. Field workers who will inter- ; view a few selected homemakers in 28 of Oregon's 36 counties, are ' Mrs. H. R. Woodburn. Ocean j Lake; Mrs. C. E. . Brissenden. . Klamath Falls; Mrs. J. A. Mil brath and Betty Stutz, Corvallis. Selection of farms to be visited has been made through a scien - tific s-amDlinK method by whic it has been found possible to get a representative cross section with a few calls. Only about 100 calls re scheduled for this state. Angricultural experiment sta tions in California, Colorado, Utah, yashington and Oregon are co Deratine in the regional study. R. S. Besse, acUng director ol ine Oregon experiment station, is re gional coordinator ol the project. This western regional study is part of one of national scope which includes similar working groups in the northeastern, north central and southern regions, with a southwestern region to be added later. Th studv is exDected to add Last 6 lays JOE'S Upstairs Clothes. Shcp Selling Oul Sacrifice Sale Ends May 15th At 9 p. m. Everything Must Be Scici Regardless cf Cost. Super Quality SMUTS New - Smart Styles. Most Wanted, Expensive 100 Wool Worsted Fabrics, Every Size Regular, Short. Stout and Long. Single and Double Breasted Models. -& oil REGULAR PRICES SPORT COATS SLACKS, PANTS 1 FUR FELT HATS At Off All Furnishings hi Vi Off Yow Last Opportunity to Buy These New. Top Quality Clothes at a Fraction of Our Regular, Plainly Marked Pri ces. Notice All Goods on Deposit Must Be Called For On or Be fore May IS. Open Every Ilighl Till 9 O'CIock n Upslairc Clothes Shop 442 Stale Si. AWve Merris Optical Ce. Next Deer te Nehlsrea's Kestaaraat. Leek fer the Neea Electric Flashing Save Sift Sln Abeve Entrance,, greatly to the value of the farm building plan service already sup plied through the state extension service in cooperation with the United States department of agriculture. 43 Delegates At Librarians Conference The annual northwest librar ians conference with 43 delegate representing 20 colleges met Sat urday at the Willamette univer sity library under the chairman ship of Dan Graves, Willamette librarian. Lancaster Pollard, superinten dent and editor of the Oregon Historical society, keynot ed the meet with a talk stress ing that college librarians should make the material available for students . rather than act as a guide. Francis Kemp, Reed col lege librarian, David Martin, CSC, University of Portland librarian and Dr. L. E. Tomlinson, Lewis and Clark college librarian, par ticipated in the discussion. Oregon State Archivist David C. Duniway spoke at the noon luncheon, at the Golden Pheas ant, on the need for school archive departments for historical and MOHiani as an exampir At the business meeting Wil liam H. Carlson, president of the Association of College and Ref erence Libraries and director of the Oregon system of higher edu cation, discussed a program for j recruiting new librarians. Charles I W. Smith, librarian emeritus of i the University of Washington, i also spoke. Marion County's Junior Deputies To Meet in Salem New members of the Marion County Junior Deputies associa tion from Gervais, Hubbard and Woodburn will meet with Sheriff i Denver Young Tuesday night in the courthouse here. I Instructions in the recently-organized group and junior deputy badges will be given the. boys by Young. Approximately 25 are ex-, pected to attend from the three towns he said. The meeting -will begin at 7 ) o'clock and will probably include.! explanations of various law en forcement agencies by Interested adults the sheriff said. 1 SUPB It's a sensational new combination for yoar greater mltfj and comfort Super Oishion Tire on new, wider Safety-Rim Wheels. And, in the lowest-priced field, only Plymouth has it. And Plymouth gives it to you as ttandard mjuiptnmt! The bigger, fatter, softer tires soak up road shocks from the side as well as from below. They make stopping easier and surer and ive you one-third man tin mileage than ordinary pre-war tires. Super -Cushions ruo cooler, too. That means yoar chances of tire failure are greatly re duced. But should trouble occur, you have P. A. Campbell, 55, Accident Victim, Dies Perry Andrews Campbell, 35, of 632 N. Liberty sL, died in Salem hospital Saturday morning from injuries suffered Thursday when struck by a boom on a construc tion job in East Salem. j Funeral services will be held from the W. T. Rigdon chapel Tuesday at 1:30 p. m. Campbell sustained fractures of the arm and shoulder and intern al injuries Thursday afternoon while working with a Pacific Tele phone and Telegraph company crew on a bridge near the state penitentiary on State street. The crew was lifting a large pontoon from the stream when a cable parted, dropping the boom : on Campbell. A resident of Salem for the past two years, Campbell was born in Alton, Mo., July 24, 1892, and had resided in Washington before moving to Oregon. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Lola Campbell of Salem; four A REPAIR JOB OR A piece of machinery suddenly-breaks and you must shut down for repairs. Perhaps It Is only a metal part that is broken. No replacement is available locally and you must send a rush order back to the factory. That takes time, and time Is costly. Perhaps we could re pair that broken part and put your, machine back In operation within a few hours. More often than not we can do lust that We do literally hundreds of such metal Jobs, whether you want permanent or temporary repairs. We hare the plant the necessary equipment and metal fabricating experience, backed by 36 years of operation. We specialize in solving the many metal problems of Oregon's farmers and Industrialists- and the list of our customers has grown with the years. W.W.StosebEtmgh Go. "Metal Products That C8 Sooth 17th Street, Salens nir nnn 11 r inr luvviui - -m.mmin uam ma mmi n mm; Extra Right-of-Way Needed for Street At Four Corners - Proponents of a move to wid en Mable street in the Four Cor ner area '.have been asked by Marion county court to determine their method of securing a sec tion of right-of-way needed along the road, the court reported Sat urday. The court has conferred with Emery Hendrickson. owner of a strip of right-of-way needed to widen the road to 60 feet. Hend rickson, reported the court, wants $500 for the strip of land 200 feet Ipng and 28.48 feet wide. Proponents of the widening project have been asked whether I children, Mrs. Harry Harris, Ralph Campbell and Glenn Camp bell, all of Longview, Wash., and Raymond Campbell of Salem; his father, Ralph Campbell of Long view: two brothers, W. p. Camp bell of Longview and Silas Camp bell of Van Nuys, Calif., and a sis ter, Mrs. Etta Sullivan, also of Van Nuys. Last ince 1912 Phone 7Mt ,nr,KTWMD FIELD HAS the added, positive protection of Plymouth V famous Safety-Rim Wheels. Patented retain ing humps are designed to bold the tire straight and tight on the rim so you can slow to a sure, safe stop. The combination of new Soper-Cushion Tires on new, wider Safety-Rim Wheels is only one of the basic advantages you get when you get a Plymouth. Tour dealer will be glad to show you the famous Quality Chart which tells the whole Plymouth value story. Study this chart! and TmTl agrees There" m lot of difference in low-priced eon and Plymouth make the difference! they prefer to accept the offer or to institute condemnation pro ceedings. Hendrickson told the court that if the road is widened it will bring it quite close to his house. Mable street was recently tak en over by the county as a county road along with a section of La Branch avenue. Proponents of the Hie Bacon Republican for Sherifii Some Are Qualified Some Are Friendly Bacon Is Both We've Never Had a War Veteran Sheriff. Let's Elect IKE BACON A MAN YOU CAN TRUST. Pd. Adv. by Baeen fer Sheriff Ceaamittee. SALES & There Is a Pacific furnace for every sixe home, whether you live In one room or a mansion. The Pacific Is built for efficiency of operation and cleanliness. It la also designed , to burn olL wood, sawdust or coal and It may be converted from one type of fuel to another If and when there Is any change In the local fuel supply. The Pacific Is built of good metal and it Is built right It is built In Salem, by W. W. Rosebraugh Cow for whom we handle the sales and service In this area. We accepted the dealership because we have been servicing furnaces for many years and have found W. W. Rosebraugh Co.'s furnaces and sawdust burner attachments among the best on the market We can now give you good furnace service at all times. A. Hi. CrHEflifiiits A Furnace Man for 25 Years Edgewater, West Sales Shop Fbene 1753 Re. 035 1 widening program must furnish the extra right-of-way needed. 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