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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1949)
11 Thm Stat man, Salm, Oroqoru Monday. Juno 17. 1149 THE VALLEY NEWS COLUMNS W I: ' From Tho Oregon Statesman's Valley Correspondents 76 Horsemen Join Silverton Qub Trail Ride By Lillie L. Madsen Farm Editor, The Statemn UNION' HILL, June 26 In a heavy drizzle, 76 riders got off to the fourth, annual Silverton Saddle club trail ride Sunday morning following the annual buckaroo breakfast served at Union Hill grange hall. A total of 138 people attended the breakfast. " Robert Humphreys1 and Walter Heater lead out over the trial which took the group two hours along the Drift Creek ridge to the old Sublimity CCC camp where the chuck wagons met the riders for lunch. The skies had cleared by then and after an hour at the resting place, the return trail took them bnck over the Silver Creek canyon to complete an 18-mile circle ride. Ted Riches, mater of cere monies, periented prizes to var Jous riders in the after breakfast ride-iip at the grange hall ground. WinnjAg prizes were Ronnie Hagie. 6, S.viciy. the youngest boy, and Rosellfl Knoop. 11. Oregcn City, the youngest girl, who each were presented a set of spurs; V. A. Heater, who admitted to 71 years, as the oldest man rider, while the woman's prize went to Myrt'e Stracharn, Albany the feminine rider "forty or over." The Portland Mounted Posse re ceived the prize for the club com ing the longest distance," and. S.-i-lem for having .J he most riders. Salem's club h;id 20 out with Mol lkThaving only two less. Cither clubs present included Albany's Linn County Posse, St. Paul Rodeo association, Territorial Riders from Oregon City, and the host club, the Silverton Saddle club, whos membership did not compete foi prizes. The breakfast was served bv the Union Hills grange Home Econ omics club with Mrs. Vern Scott aa chairman. Variety Store," Restaurant VJIII til j silverton 4- Mrs. lister Webb, ! who.-e husbatid. is with the Brown- ! GATES--A large crowd attend- j Carnivall company- at Silver ed the opening of Garrisons Var- ; , lUn htniil Jety Store and Fountain , lunch Friday. Coffee and cake were i ae'rved to the customers. Jean Stooks of Portland is apending the week with her aunt, j Mrs. Fred Stone. The home beinc built for. Mrs. ' Rosa Roten is- nearing completion , Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Haun and j family spent the week end at Depoe Hay. " Guests Thursday at the home f Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Hirts : were Helen and Betty Geiblehause j of Edmonton. Canada, Mrs. Harry i Ragon and children and Mrs. Al- ' v.. i -, . . . r l,iUrAn f T i Angel. :! f i; : Mr. and Mrs. L. H Horn. Ch.co. Scouts PrblllOtPtl at Calif., moved into the Charles Tucker home last week. Horn is (.Olirt OI llOllor ! employed on the Detroit dam pro- j i j-t. SILVF.KTOK Court of honor Mrs. Molly Alexander is spend-! for Boy Scoiil troop 61 was held ing the summer at Breitenbush j at the Christen church Thursday Hot springs. ! night with awards issued at the Wiley Muise is employed part- investure seryiee including: time at Jenkins Hardware at Mill i Tenderfoot JKeith Cooley. Buddy City, i Groan, Sam vlein. Wayne Smith " 1 Jerry Kulmeyer. Robert Robbins. i Jimmy McBiride: merit badges. me united Mates must lmpon , most of the fibers used in mak I Ing rope Valley Obituaries Henry Bushman AURORA Henry Bushman. 69, 'died Saturday in a Portland hos pital after a lingering illness. Bushman was born Dec. 10. 1879, in Stockton, Kansas, and came to Oregon in 1893. He had since made his home in the vicinity of Au rora. In 1916 he was married to Ida B. Miller, who passed away in 1947. Surviving are a son, Karl of ; Newport; a sister. Liilu Lawpaugh j of Portland; brothers, John of ; Gervais. Will of Woodburn, Luke ; of Aurora and Norman of Port- , land: 2 grandchildren and 1 great- grandchild. 1 Funeral services will be held Monday at 2 p.m. at the Miller Funeral Home in Aurora with in termmt to follow in Butteville cemetery. IN MG0LD-T0NE MJUd clrcM of H19 Ufq 12 4,Bf '-it a V" Boy, 6, Joins ... .- r 1 Ill is l Ronnie Hetcie, 6. of Sandr. member of the Territorial Riders, won the prize as the ouniet rider at the Sunday morniag SUrerton Saddle Club f ourth annual trail ride. Ronnie U riding his own horse, Sunitbo. and; hat been riding since he was two yeaifl old. .( S ta tesma n Fa r m P hoto. ) r v f MPT , it i L. . is 4; This group ot cooks, neaei rr i'irs. Vern Scott, second on the right hand side, prepared the Silverton Saddle club burkerno breakfast for 138 people Sunday morning at I'nion Hill. ' (Statesman Fa tin Photos.) ; VJillov Itriofs being treated for a fractured foot. The Webbs fcjave brenj staying at the June Drike home on South Water street! while at Silverton. She will be ton fined to! the hospi tal for several days. ; Silverton Plans for' 'the annual Silverton Wet-tern Horseshow in August will be m.ifie af the Hotary luncheon Monday noon All com mitteces will report on progress of the plans, feorge Wiesner. Ro tary club president who is spon soring the shOw, reports. ,P,.ond class llohn Mulvihill. Lar ry Brown, pon Wilch. Kenne'h Hahn. first Class. Larry Brown, Richard Brekke, Keith Bonner Larry Bro n was advanced; to life scout, and David Finley. to star scout. PICNIC POINTER: BUY YOUR CASE OF OLYMPIA BEER WELL IN ADVANCE. AVOID LAST MINUTE disappointment! HBY SHOPPING EARLY OLYMPU M1WMB COtMrmata, CASES Cn" ate liotlcl w thlnf rKirto turtomnd- . bfiqkttf celorad "m" jctn. colored ton and lUty ii j Trail Riders . Krcnz Presides At Union Hill Grange Meet UNION HILL The Union Hill Grange met Friday with Grange i Master J C. Krenz presidihg. The agriculture report wks giv en by W. M. Tate, and Mrs. Verny ! Scott, home economics chairman, ; reported' on the June meeting at the home of Mrs. Myra Fischer in Salem. Mrs. J. C. Krenz was in : chaise of the display table Which featured roses. Mrs. Floyd Fox. legislative chairman, talked on the CVA. the sales tax and the proposed Bran nan plan. A 1949 pennant was received by the local chapter ; from the state. grange for having , all its dues paid during the year. W. M. Tate pre.-ented a program consisting of singing, reports on : the state grange convention in Coos Bay by Mr. and Mrs. Krenz and Tate ard 4-H summer school i j j 7 My Mommie Likes 1 fLL ) CURLY'S ui i ; MILK in Purc-Pafc I for Your Convenience CURLY'S MILK in the handy Pure-Pak container! ! ' Yes, you not only enjoy the richness and fine flaror of our energy-giving milk, but you also enjoy the Con enience of the Pure-Pak container with no deposit, no returns, no bottle washing. The Pure-Pak container is formed, sterilized and filled with pasteurized milk in ttconds! It is sanitary, light weight, easy to pour, easy to store, and so easily disposed of when empty. Now at youx favorite store ask for it! CURLY'S DAIRY Phone 3-8783 Detroit Girls Honored on Birthdays DETROIT Mrs. Guy Wilson entertained on Friday afterrion in honor of their daughters. Ruby, who Was nine years old June 25, and Thelma, seven years old on June 23. The children played games indoor and out while a door prize was won : by David Payne. Children present were Donna R a e Steven,son, Diane White, Claudia and Perry Fry, Carol CamDbell. Nina, Frankie and Gene Walter. La Wana. Marilyn i and Linda Morgan, Merrily and Johnnie Hanan. Sally Fletcher. Jimmie Cook. Dickie Jacobs. Dale McDaniels. David and Jackie Payne and Evelyn Wilson. Mrs. Perry y and Mrs. Ed Hanan. were additional guests. Refresh ments were served. Each child was presented with a fancy hat made of crepe paper by the host ess. The parents of Jack Fidel, new ly appointed assistant deputy here, was visited this Week bv his parents from Santa Monica. Cahf. They were on their way to Can ada. Mr. and Mrs. P. H Crawford re turned the first of the week from Reno. Nev. where they had been ( to attend a reunion of her family, i Ijoes Mfrean arrived this . week from Bfie. Idaho, to spend ! her Vacation at the home ol her ; mother. ?!rs. Delme Nelson, i Mrs. Curtis Howard -ard son Kenly retu'-npd ThursdRy exening by bus frr-m a visit w-th her par ents. Mr. ard Fresno. Calif. Mrs. R. Bowen of Father Piggyback LONDON. .Tune ?fi - V- Ei?bt-year-o!d Alsn Ambrose didn't know his own strong h. His f.irher gave rim a piggy back ride and said :'aftervard. "Now wh;.t about Bovine me ono''" A?an, who weighs 2 po inds, picked t:n his 182-poiid father and rarr-d him around with no troub'e at all. Now he does it often just for fun. ROMANI DF.ATII DECREES BUCHAREST. Romania. June ' 26-4.-f)-Fi e Romanians accused of i plotting against the communist- dominated Romanian government ! were sentenced to death Saturday, i They were the first ever to be ' given death sentences on such a charge in peacetime in Romania. ! - . . . j reports by Eldon Jaquet, Keith i Scott and Frances Scott. We Want Your EGGS Always a Dependable Cash Market If you don't bring them to Curly 's we both lose. Curly 's Dairy Faircrounds Road at Hood Ph. 3-8783 453) Bullets Scare Groom-to-Be SAN PEDRO, Calif., June 2S- Today was to be 43-year-old William R. Ervin's jwedding day, but instead he's going to New York where things are quiet er and a fellow can drive his car without being shot at by myster ious gunmen. i A man drove alongside Erwin's car Saturday and fired three shots a i him. One tore away pis wrist watch. The other two passed be tween his face a;nd the! steering wheel. Police believe the atterfipted as sassin is a rejected suitdr of Er vin's bride-to-be, 24jyear-old GloriA Gardena, but she jsays she doesn't know who he is. Ervin says he's postponing the j wedding indefinitely. Mrs. Clark, Former Salem Resident, I)ies Mrs. H. G. Clark, a fofmer Sa lem resident, died Sundayj in Port land following an illness of sev eral months. j The former Inez Rotani she liv ed in Salem when a girl. Her father, the late John Roan, once operated a furniture store here. Mrs. Clark was a member of the Town and Country club here and attended meetings regularly after moving to Portland. Surviving are a daughter. Bar bara of New York. N Y..; and two sisters. Mrs.WiIbur F. Brock of Kennewick. Wash, and Oskie Ro .tan of Portland. i Funeral services will; be an nounced later. i FHA State Finance Co. At' FHA Loans Long-Time Farm Loans License S-216 and M-222 Personal and Auto Loans yMr K4kJ t HUNDREDS OF YARDS DOZENS OF PATTERNS MADE TO SELL FOR 1.79 TO 2.98 Gorgeous Drapery- Sove from 52c to J? 7fo yord on magnificent fabrics that are luxurious in every sense of the word! c . -J . ; itnc.inl. ctrikinn moderns . . . vivid floral bouquets . . . ollover florals! ALL PRESHRUNK! Wide texturei: sailcloths . . . pebble textures . . . spun rayons . . . gabardines . . . twills . monnie crepes I Cona ear for first choice I ' Mr" 155 N. Liberty ft m O Sturdy Washable Fabrics O Bright Prints and Solids O Latest Little-girl Styles O Newest Frills and Trims Come Early! They'll Go Fast at This 155 N. Liberty cover Prints crisp stripes . . . exquisite 48 IN. WIDE, COLCRFAS1, variety of weights and SPECIAL PUUASS SUAE! Phone 3-9191 m 9. " r6 L2 v r. Phono 3-3191 Terrific Price! 1 i fir v. n i(U' w m m m tlprtick ti4t. 1 AcfMl Sim CAPITAL DRUG STORE Stat At liberty "On Th Corner" V