Il ThW Statestncm; Sotem,' Oregon; Sunddrf. October 31. 1348 I Wears Orchid from Council I Attendance pi Council Sessions Wins Plaudits for Mrs. English High Level of Employment To Continue Oregon trade and industrial con cerns are employing about 17,000 more persons than at this time a By Dob Dill Staff Writer, The Statesman Mrs. Frank English is a Salem resident who takes her civic re sponsibility seriously, learning the duties of a citizen by virtue of her living in Salem t the same address for 39 years. She has attended each city council meetineregularly the last few years and this -week the council shewed their appreciation of her interest by giving her j year ago arid prospects for the re- an orenra. The orchid came .afca complete surprise to Mrs. English and is about the last thing she . thought would ever happen to her. White-Haired Mrs; English came to Salem with her husband just before Christmas in 1909. settling on a tered the Portland office, while Salem, Klamath Falls, Eugene and Hood River were next in line. Industrial and trade placements reached 65,763 for the year, slight ly more than in the same period in 1947. .Agricultural referral for the first nine months of 1948 number ed 156,604, of which ft6 per cent were seasonal. Prtngle Organization of a Boy Scout troop is planned for Thurs- J ' 1 day, November' 4 at' 7:30' p.m. at the school house. Boys from 9 through 14 who wish to Join A Boy Scout troop are asked to b present with their parents to meet with the scout representative. , mainder of the year are favorable ! despite letdowns in seasonal lines, the original house burned down the state unemployment compen about six years ago. White haired, sation commission reported Sat kindly, and grandmotherly, she is ; urday. well known throughout Salem fori Reports. by 635 employers to lo ner interest in her town and her cal employment office representa-j neighbors. tives indicate employment may f Dtti-incr tha firct U'rtrlH ' o " IVfi-c fill it 1 o faiu ryra farm at the present addres. She English helped nurse many Salem tober and November but should has lived there ever since though persons through the wide spread recover considerable ground dur-! the present house was built after nu epidemic of that period. Lat- ing the holiday season. Construct - er she helped put over programs tion. lumbering' and trade grov to furnish playground equipment have led in recent months tor foiHighland school. ; raising the state's payrolls to re-. Lives on Farm cord heights and no sign of the Mrs. English has 52 acres of end of the general uptrend ap- land around her neat little white ; pjpars from interviews with em- house, and she farms I all of it. pjoyers. ' There are vegetables, fruit, berries, Local offices placed 9,791 per- ; and nuts; as well as hundreds of sons in jobs during September, j flowers, shrubs and trees. She feels slightly more than in August but that every person should have a just below the same month a year little land to tend, even if it only ! ago. Bi-weekly claims reporting j window flower box. I and a slackening in seasonal farm Mrs. English has three sons, activities caused a decrease of 20.3 one a college professor in Penn- 1 per cent. In reception contracts sylvania, and two in Portland, one from the previous month of the an engineer with the U.S. army, i 100,764 persons tallied, a third en- ARC Officials At 'Conference Mrs. 'Frank English, 26S0 Cherry ave- wh Juts lived in Salem for nearly 49 years, is shown above with, the orchid- given to her by the Salem city council this week as a token for her interest In civic affairs as evidenced by her regular attendance at city council meet ings. (Photo by Don Dill, Statesman staff photographer.) STRENGTHEN The Office Of Attorney General Pd. Adv.. K. Duniw,y, Adv.. K. Yon Bitif .. Portland. O. Twenty persons from Marion county chapter. American Red Cross, were in Corvallis Saturday to attend a conference for Junior Red Cross. Plans were formulated for the 1948-49 program of work. The adult leaders and school workers included Eleonor Roberts, Mrs. Harold W. Ransom and Mrs. Carmalite Weddle, adult leaders whj were on the program: Don Legg. state relations officer; Susan M. Faherty, county manager; Kay Perrin and Doreen Cavender from Salem high school; Caroline Feay, Delton Miller, Barbara Wagness and David Rhoten from Leslie junior high school; Fred Rose, Shirley Bratner. Jimmy Gilmore and Donald Lane, all of Keizer school; . Barbara Farris. Beverly Salisbury, Mae Salisbury. Ted Henry, and Gail Ashby, all of Par rish junior high school. T Elect . I J My r N Ilnniripal Judge JUSTICE Is a Matter of INTELLIGENCE and FAIRNESS Not the Number of Caes Hamlled or the Amount of Revenue Collected Qualified Attorney Veteran Fair and Impartial Pd. Adv. by Bnren for Judge Com., Frank Cross, Chalrmam . i pit i i Ait For Better . Law Enforcement In Marion County Vole FOR Herbert W. Carter DISTRICT ATTORIIEY Pd. Adv. by Carter for D. A. Comm. E. Crawforrf", Ch. Photo Contest Winners Set Winners in a final contest photography of last week end's Northwest Flower and Garden fair were announced Saturday by Es till L. Brunk photo contest chair man. The awards were made within the Salem Men's Garden club, which sponsored the fair, for pic tures taken of various exhibits. Winners in order were as fol lows: Decorative arrangements John Erickson, Harry Esch, Alex Tay lor. Fruits, nuts, vegetables Harry Esch, Mark Gehlar, Kenneth Frad. Centennial exhibits Mark Geh lar, John Erickson, Kenneth Frad. Chrysanthemums Glen Kleen, all places. Sherwood Man Pays Fine in Silverton Court SILVERTON, Oct. 30-(Special) -Harold Francis Sweeney of Sher wood paid a $250 fine and had his car operator's license revoked to day in Silverton police court on a charge of driving while intoxicat ed. A 30-day Jajct sentence was suspended. r"f Tflneires sitnDl ifimme... Yom Cairn (Gflamnouariize If omit QB suit On m oil Miitcflnemi nBefore Onrlsttsitiias t " "7" " a"" "i f'-'Tt''-;y-j j . A L . - ' Iff li''J ftT m--was : : - v-, . i. r hfrwrir. m i rf- . -1ti:i nnjt: HI f COLOTYLE IS THE AIISWEH Yotir drab, plaster cracked walls will ccme to life with water resistant Colotyle. T. "f ' , t M Will you be proud of your walls when your holiday guests arrive. You will be if you in stall this lustrous, grease-proof, plastic-coated wallboard. No more painting ever. CALL US FOR FREE ESTIMATE 340 Court , Phono 2-2493 ft COLUMBIA UIVHR jj? h SALMON JPLKIA ' But not as ridiculous as it sounds, Mrs. Housewife. Remember back in the '30's when you could feed your family well for about $35.00 a month? If some one had said then that in 1948 you could only feed your family skimpily at $90.00 amonth you have exclaimed "Ridiculous !' But here are today's prices and your foocj expenses and costs are flying high. NOW, HERE'S A NEW MONOPOLY THAT CAN THREATEN YOUR FOOD BUDGET A small group shop -The Gillnetter's Union wants a "closed on the Columbia River salmon catch. They are getting 704 of the total catch now but they want ALL! They'd even take away the 10 that the Indians catch at Celilo but a long-time treaty with the United States govefnment pre vents that. So they are aiming at the "fixed appliances" and your pocketbook by trying to eliminate this" gear that only catches 20 of the salmon. But that 20 is the balance that can keep your salmon prices in bounds -that prevents a Columbia River "closed shop"; that protects not only tht price of salmon but also helps keep your entire meat budget from ballooning out of sight. TELL YOUR HUSBAND THESE FACTS ABOUT THE' GILLNETTER'S BILL Sports fishermen have certainly risen to the bait of this Gilmetter's Union. The latter claim their measure would "stop the waste of our great natural fish resource which, if allowed to continue would result in the loss of millions of business, employment and tourist dollars and the end of a clean outdoor sport. The facts show as reported by the Oregon Fish Commis sion, June, 1948 that alt that happens when you ban fixed gear is that more fish are caught by gillnets. The sportsmen and people of the State of Washington fell for this same line of propaganda back in 1935. The samo" report shows only one definite trend during these eleven years the closed-shop union of gillnetters caught more and more of the Columbia River salmon with no indication of increased salmon runs. So, his bill to eliminate "fixed appliances' is not conserva tion of salmon... but absolute control Sf the salmon catch. Therefore ask yourselves what might happen to your food costs if a "Columbia River closed shop" should create this dire monopoly. a YOU CAN PREVENT FIGHT THIS FOOD MONOPOLY NOW IT FROM HAPPENING! You housewives have had experience with such control conditions. You know wha; happens to your household ex- 1 penses! Usually you have had to fight AFTER these condi tions exist. But in this case you can fight BEFORE it is formed. It will be much easier to prevent the "closed shop on the Columbia by voting November 2nd, next Tuesday. 319 NO Protect Your Food Costs Against Monopoly IEMEMSEI: TW Ont fish Cwmin mnd Slot lWatwir Kv tfc avHwrity H Wlloto oN flmn fisHtnf nw. Thh l ry lndkt tttot tHh bill it wnwc -T anty Ifc oWiyl f n iwM tmgmmnt f wlrnn fisk to rfirtoto tttm PAID ADV. OIEGON SEINt AND POUND NET FISHSIMEN'S ASSOCIATION. H. K. PA IK El. SECIETAtY, P.O. SOX 542. ASTOIIA. OtECON YOUR CREDIT IS ALWAYS WELCOME AT ELFSTROMS Terms as Low as 5.56 a Ilonlh