The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 05, 1949, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE VALLEY
NEWS COLUMNS
From Tha Oregon Statesman's Vallty Correspondents
; , ; 4
New Pastor
Galifornian to '
. j
Manage Horse
Show at P.L
PORTLAND. Jul 5 Selection
of Harrison Cutler, Napa, j Calif,
thoroughbred breeder, as j mana
ger of the national horse show at
the Pacific International Livestock
.Exposition here Oct. 7-15 was an
nounced Monday by General
, Manager Walter A. Holt, j
Cutler succeeds Tevis Paine,
who withdrew after many years
at the P.I. because oi pressure oi
duties on the administrative staff
of the Western Fair association
In California. j .
The .new manager is prominent
among" Pacific Coast horsemen
and yearly has a full schedule of
show management. Included this
year is the Oregon state fair horse
show in Salem. !
Cutler plans to supplement Eng
lish saddle and harness; events,
long a P.I. top drawing card, with
western horse classes. Included
will be Arabians, Palomjhos apd
Quarter horses. !
"I'm aiming at a little faster
tempd which I think will! be well
received by the public and make
room for an increased number of
pleasure - andt stock horse j events,"
Cutler said. ! '
His schedule this year i includes
Chico district fair; Mother Lode
fair, Sonora; San Diego National
horse show; Alameda county fair;
Santa Rosa county fair and San
Joaquin National horse show.
Arthur Stowells
Backet Auburn
Aftpr Cnnniln Trin
AUBURN Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Stowell and daughter Hazel have
returned from a three-week vaca
tion trip to the north.
They first visited at Fruitland
at the home of former neighbors,
Mr. and Mrs. Alvi Harp, and in
Walla Walla, Wash., with Mrs.
StowelFs sister and family. They
then drove north to the summer
resort of Banff, Canada, where
tbey spent three day, driving on
to Calgary to visit 'StoweH's sister
whom he had not seen for 22 years,
his brother and family, and in the
home of several neices and neph
ews. 1 i
They came home through Gla
cier national park and stopped at
Grandview, Wash., for a visit with
. another sister of Mrs." StowelL
East Salem Lunch
Place Now Open
EAST SALEM A new business
place was opened on Saturday at
the corner of Lancaster drive and
Silverton road. ' !
Sam Heinrick and Sylvester Jer
ry who have" operated a fountain
lunch in West Salem are now in
their new place of business in the
George Hardy building.,
" i ' I
fcrz
The Rev. E. A. Parrish, who has
been Serving the Christian
eh arch's!; missionary program
with assignment in Portland In
recent years, hat been appoint
ed minister to the new Christian
church In the Liberty area south
of Salem. The church is plan
ning a I dedication service for
the new! building July 10.
64-Yf.ar-OU
'Walking Man'
Burns up Road
MILL cflTV Holiday weekend
tourists oh the North Sanfiam
highway fooked twice as they
passed a fast-striding figure in
white jersey and shorts that of
beefy 64-yfear-old Paul Smith.
Th big! man's road workouts
are in preparation for a July 24
contest it Lebanon between'
Smith anct an 1,150 pound horse
in a 75-mie walkathon. The horse
"Buck" is owned by Bill Glen
denen of I Lebanon who has a
$1,000 bet Jon outcome of the en
durance test.
Smith, vyho told passing motor
ists this weekend he was doing
26 miles at a walk and felt confi
dent he'd lutwalk the horse, once
placed fiftfi in a New York to Los
Angeles walking contest. Smith
maintains f he'll win because he
can eat while he walks and won't
needret ifctops.
Building Acquired
By Rolfe Bentson
SILVERTON RoUe Bentson,
Eroprietor of "Goldie's Place," has
ought the. building now housing
hjs business. The structure is also
occupied by Given 's barber shop
and Rawleigh's Products com
pany. !
Valley
Obituaries
Mrs. Fred (Ellen) Carter
MILL tlTY Funeral services
will be he!d Wednesday, July 6,
at the Mill City Christian church
at 2 p.m. (DST) for Mr?. Ellen
Carter, who did Sunday at a
Lebanon hospital. Interment will
be at Fairview cemetery east of
Mill City. "
She was born in Michigan and
moved to Oregon 40 i years ago.
Her husband, Fred Carter, died
two years ago. Two sons and
two daughters of the family also
are deceased..
Mrs. Carter issurvived by five
daughters, Bessie Yoeman of Los
Angeles, Calif, Evelyn Billings of
Grand Ronde, Fanny Brown of
Moundsville, W.Va., Alma Plym
ale of Lebanon, and Rosa of Port
land; one son, Edwin Carter of
Sweet Home; 13 grandchildren
and six grandchildren, and by a
brother in Washington.
Swegle Families
In Weekend Visits
1
SWEGLC The Charles Norton
familjr took a weekend trip to
Humbug park near Breitenbush
springs forf their holiday vacation.
In the party were Mr., and Mrs,
Charles Nojirton, Mr. and Mrs. Har
old Norton and two children, Mr.
and Mrs. W. V. Ellis and their
family of I Brown K- Road, Alvera
Purcell an Eleanor Berry.
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Brandt were
in Portland on Sunday and with
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson and
Mr. and Mrs. Olaf Anderson en
joyed a picnic , dinner on Monday
at Suverton park. .
i -j" ' -
12 Luke, Burnette
Families Have Outing
About 12 Luke and Burnette
families gathered for an Inde
pendence jjay picnic, at the Rob
ert Burnette place on Pleasant
View;: drive and the nearby Luke
place; I
An- outdoor lunch was served.
Men of the families played base
ball ; and ! youngsters joined in
other games during the after
noon I
' ;! i.
Mrs. Edward Holden
Visits South Dakota
SILVERTON Mrs. Ed Holden
will leave! shortly to spend two"
months' visiting at her former
home in South Dakota. She plans
to return to Silverton late . this
summer, j
V 1 -
DON BERGMAN ON CARRIES
. SILVERTON Donald C. Berg
man,; airman apprentice, son of
Clarence C,. Bergman of Silverton
route 1, is scheduled to go aboard
the aircraft carrier USS Valley
Forge with an attack . squadron
this month for a few weeks of
carrier operations off the coast of
southern California.
k l !' . A. . ...
k An tAiraci lor ireauna goiier.is
obtained from the thyroid glands
of animalaf slaughtered for meat
Czech Actions
End in Ouster
Of Newsmen
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, July
4-(iP-Aetion by- the Communist
Czechoslovak government has re
sulted in the ouster of an Ameri
can correspondent and the with
drawal - of a British reporter.
I Harold Melahn of the United
Press, who was technically accred
ited here as correspondent for
British United Press, was expell
ed.
Godfrey Lias.
pondent for the
veteran corres-
London Times,
was withdrawn by his newspaper
after representations were made
in London by the Czechoslovak
embassy. " j . r
Melahn left by automobile for
the U.S. zone of Germany late
today. The foreign office, asked
why he had to ileave, answered:
"Mr. Melahn frill know. It Is
for personal reasons."
Lias was not actually expelled,
but it was learned that more
drastic steps would have been tak
en against him had his newspaper
not agreed ; to have him leave.
It was understood that no speci
fic writing of his was attacked.
He was charged! with "non-journalistic
activities" including con
tact with an -unnamed "high po
litical personage!' of the former
Czech regime.
Lias was one j of the few pre
war central European correspond
ents who remained in this area
since the communists seized the
Czech government, in February,
1948. He also was a reporter for
the Christian Science Monitor and
the Economist, a British weekly.
Hooded Men
Whip Mechanic
In Tennessee
DUNLAP, Teikn., July 4-(iip)-Five
men wearing white robes and
hoods took a 42-year-old mechanic
from a car in front of his house
early Sunday ahd whipped him,
Sheriff Henry Barker said.
Bill Tippins, maintenance work
er on a Sequatchie county rock
crusher and a World War II vet
eron, was listed as the victim.
The sheriff reported that towns
people are aroused and that "sen-
, Kclvinator is
told char to tho
floor!
CM
29995
Other Models frpm 189.95
i
'Prief W r Mumy In ymm kUdmt
Oh -W ProteM Pirn. Simla mnd Ummt
Imm r. View mnd tpedficmtmnt tmbrnt mt
mkanat avinaut mmtiem. j
i 40-Ib. Frozen Food Cheat!
Loads of shelf space!
12-quart crisper!
Bonus cold ipace! Refriger
ated Fruit Freshener keeps
fruits and soft drinks taste
tingling cold!
Powered bf Kelvinator's
thatV aealed-in-ateel!
StM tltm compf lnf
Open rriday TH f TM.
Ralph iJohnson
APPLIANCES
335 Center
timent Is mnnng pretty high
here"' over the incident, v
Tippins, the sheriff added, said
he had returned to his home short
ly before midnight and went to
sleep in the back seat of his car,
rather than wake his family. He
said he was : awakened about 1
ajn, by five masked and robed
men trying to poll him from the
car. -
"Two of them," he related,
twisted my arms ip behind my
back. Onetoof off and held a
pistol onfme while the other 4w
hit me in the stomach, eldest and
face with their fists. He said
they knocked him down and kick
ed him.
Tippins said bis 17-year-old
daughter, Billie, came out of the
house screaming and the men left.
He said he got his shotgun and
walked into town to the sheriff's
office.
The mechanic said the men told
him that "if you don't quit what
you been doing well be back." He
said he believed' (hey referred, to
the fact" that "I drink little beer
on the week-ends. But I'm not
going to! stand for that kind of
treatment If they come back here
111 be waiting for them."
Sheriff Barker asserted that
Tippins had a good reputation and
that the attack was "vicious and
uncalled for."
(Thirty-seven per cent of the
meat animals are raised east of
the Mississippi river.
Th Stcdesmcm, Sqlectu f Precon, Tnetclcrf, juh!.S. ,1949-3
World Industrial
Production Drops
LAKE SUCCESS, J u 1 y 4-ff-The
U.N. bulletin of statistics re
ported Friday the first quarterly
decline in world industrial prod
uction since the end of World War
IL
Until the first quarter of 1949,
tha nwmthlv nubllCaUon IIIO.
1 ... . ili
f world prooucuoa naa wa
uninterrupted Increaie. The wit
out for the. first three months of
this year, however, jjwaa 1.4 Pf
cent below the f igurfe for the lasV
quarter of 1949.!
The bulletin, prepared by UJf.
economists, attributed the drop
primarily to levelling off 1
production in the United States.
V
from coast to coast they've
been advertised at $3.65
n o
sale
First time fa history for an Arrow shirt sale!
Imagiac! Yoa save 91.70 aa every shirt you buyf
Dress and Sport styles all first quality.
flurry In Tuesday lor your share ol the savings!
The manufacturers of Arrow shirts had ti clear the track's
for incoming fall and winter merchandise and Roberts
was on hand to help them. We bought thousands of 'famed
Arrow shirts in spring and summer styles to sell at! this
unheard of price! All are perfect every thread in place,
every button anchored solidly. All are Sanforize shrunk.
am have all the famous Arrow features you know so
Other Styles of fancy dress Shirts regular $3.95 to $S.O0l
NOW J2.45
- - i
-
DRESS SHIRTS in six collar styles; French and plain euffs:j;solid
colors; pin stripes, candy stripes, woven stripes; sires 14-17. sliceves
32-35.
Other Styles of Sport Shirts-regular $3.95 to $5.95-NOW $2.45
' M-
SPORTS SHIRTS with long or short sleeves; two pockets; n-or
- -.1 - . 1 1.1 .L . m ..... . ..V H
w.u aiic, muauciauii; g;aoaraines; SKipaents.
a "' aTi f m
yJ, i jiai ARROW TllS-regular $1.00-NOW 55 '4
.
"CgtigWfJC aaaaaafc 1 S"V' ' j
aaMaianMMBBw aM 3
a5j A) :HebaaiaaBaBeaawaaMfc ; siSt.
KSKW'' 'sjaaaaWaVBahH v j iTjr l , in. - - 1 r - --w-'j m m
" 1 j : ;,VSr?!ir. ,r r -f- 1 1
mm ma m m i - . . , --- m r
mm mm - w m - m m s . . , m .
11 11 11 r all! A T sncs. Roberts Eros.
mm -a st at a - a as sa ' . - sr . - m
1
Special Motel
3 : t -'
For Your Conveni
ence, Roberts
Men's Depa r t in n t
i ii
will open at. 1:30 a.
Tuetdiy morning
for this Arrow alol
We Give and Redeem S&H Green Stamps
in ., m , .. .y