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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1949)
CSiy Mews HBFueffs INJURIES LISTED Mr. and Mrs. Raymond M.Iul lin, Sutherlifl, Ore., were reported in good condition at Salem Mem orial hospital following an auto wreck near Jefferson junction on highway 99-E Friday night Each Incurred a fractured pelvis In the collision. Joel Kersey and M. L. Boyd, Modesto, fcalif., men who were passengers in the other car involved, were dismissed after treatment to minor injuries at the same hospital. ; Federally Insured Savings Cur rent dividend 2. See First Federal Savings First 142 S. Lib erty. Phone 3-4944. Insured savings earn more than ! two per cent at Salem Federal i Savings Association. 560 State st COLLEGE REGISTERS TWO Among 1,517 new students ad mitted to Washington State col lege for the fall term beginning in September are two from Salem, Margaret Claire Acton, 280 Han sen ave., and Jaunita Edith Stearns, 215 S. Winter st. Clute'i home for elderly men, rea sonable rates. Ph. 3-1335. MARY. TAVES 24-2 ins .di;t.o Karakul Karpet It's new. At's re versible, It's 100 virgin wool and woven through and through, only $4.95 sq yd. Ph. 3-7648 or 3-3364. MOTHER DIES IN EAST Mrs. Richard G. Seyerin has re ceived word of the death of her mother, Mrs. Mary Imrie, on Fri day in Glenn Falls, N. Y., at the age of 83 years. Mrs. Irmie was a native ol Aberdeen, Scotland. U-Pick peaches, $1 box. Bring con tainer. Morton Tompkins. Out Wal lace Rd. to Grand Island. Beautiful table top Simplex man gle $75. 697 Norman Ave. Landscaping and designing. No job too large or too small. F. A. Doer fler and Sons Nursery, 150 N. Lan caster Dr. at 4 Corners. Ph 2-1322 Launderette 1255 Ferry St. TOWNSEND MEET MONDAY Central Townsend club 6 will meet Monday evening at 259 Court st for a forum discussion. Do your home canning the low cost, easy way. Blundelts Kanning Kitchen, 13tb & Wilbur. Phone 3-35S2. Soviet Output of Cliainpagiiel Autos, Prefab Homes Jumps I By Tom Whitney? f " MOSCOW, Aug. 20-(iVThe central statistical administration of creases in the output of luxuries necessities of life. At the name time this communique claimed that Soviet Industrial workers had increased, their productivity of labor by 15 percent as compared with a year ago. The central statistical administ ration claimed, for instance, that the output of champagne in the . second quarter of 1949 was 353 percent over that of the second quarter of 1948. It said that output of passen ger cars which are on general retail sale here, to all citizens, rose 123 per cent that production of prefabricated homes rose 47 per cent of bicycles 48 per cent, radio receivers 106 per cent, phono graphs 70 per cent sewing ma chines 48 per cent watches 99 per cent and cameras 18 per cent. It also claimed that output of spirits had risen by 28 per cent in the same period, of cigarets 20 per cent, of grape wines by 27 per cent and of beer by 26 per cent. Sales Increase The central statistical administ ration also reported that the sales of radio-receivers were up 60 per cent of bicycles 55 per cent of mo torcycles 80 per cent and of wa tches 150 per cent. The output of foodstuffs and clothing and also sales of food stuffs and clothing was reported also as having risen considerably. For instance, according to this official communique, during the second quarter of 1949 output ex ceeded that of the same quarter of 1948 for food and clothing items by the following percentages: meat 15 per cent; sausage items 82; fish 27; animal, fats 6; vegetable fats 47; confectionary goods 38; canned goods 51; tea 40; cotton cloth 16; linen cloth 22; woolen cloths 24; silk cloth 34; leather MEM Phone 3-4642 Gel a Free . . - . f " ".J Estimate on a Johns-IIanville Roof AVOID Ilalhis Bros. LEAVE FOR CANADA Gordon Gilmore, Cascade area council Boy Scout executive. Mrs. Gilmore and their children are to leave by auto today on a vacation trip to Victoria and Vancouver! B. C- and, other western points. i ' g't-.j Air-Steamship tiotets anywhere Kugel, 3-7694. 735 N. Capitol St. I ': ' i I Tuberous Begonias, thousands to choose frpm. f 7 miles west ; of Salem on Dallas Road at Green wood. ALTERATION APPROVED A. H. Rogers was granted a fcity building permit Saturday to make alterations costing SI, WO to a house at 1975 N. 5th st More freshly killed young turkeys to fry or bake. 39c lb. C S. Orwig 4375 Silverton Rd. Ph. 2-6 128 i Alaska 12 day cruise,; best offered in years, from Van.. BC, $255.00. Ph. 3-?94. Salem Travel Agency Kugel. s ! It Drunk Driving Results in Total Of S750 Fines : I Driving while Intoxicated cost three men a total of S750 in muni cipal court Saturday. I Identical sentences of 30-days in jail, suspended on payment of $250 fines, with drivers' licenses revoked for one year . were meted to Frank' Jack Isom, Salem route 6, box 663; Thomas Aflthur Brese, Salem route 6, box 386;; and Rob ert Russell Utter, Dallaf J Joseph Bartholomew Gores, 1332 Court st.l was fined $50 for reck less driving in another municipal court action. t Marine Corps Reserve Members Promoted g Promotions for three marine corps reservists in Salem's 0 bat tery, 4th 105 mm howitzer! bat talion, were announced Saturday Donald M. Hood and Alonzo A Esau, both of Salem, land Emer son V. Murphy, Dallas, allsjwere advanced in rating from corporal ' to sergeant. f recent official communique f t the the USSR reveals important in and semi-luxuries as well as of the f. . f f! footwear 28; rubber footwear 27; stockings and socks 35, f More Food Products Sales !of necessities: also rose rapidly. Thus the communique reports that in the second quar ter of 1949 15 more fod products were sold than in the same period last year in the USSR including 51 more meat, 40 more confectionary goods, and 17 per cent more sugar. It added that wool cloth sales increased in the same period 87 per cent, silk cloth by 80 per cent. garments by 24 per cent, lyid lea ther shoes by 28 per cent, i Every; worker here knows that the more items he turns out the larger his pay. During the last two years prices have been, ireduced not only on necessities but partic ularly on some luxury items so that they are now within the reach of more workers budgets. "3 Much Advertising In addition increasing Amounts of advertising of all sorts encour ages workers to purchase luxury and semi-luxury items. I The figures in the central sta tistical administration's commun ique seem to indicate quite clearly in any case that: i y. 1. Soviet industrial workers are striving, to increase their; produc tion. f 1 : 2. These workers are spending more money on durable goods and luxuries such as champagne, as well as on foods and clothing which are in the class of necessities. 3. The Soviet government is do ing much to increase; the output of durable goods, luxuries and semi-luxuries to satisfy : this in creased armaria, j s I M 151 ! THE BOSH - Iloofing Co 4 , . y U - DOWN TO THE SEA FOR SHRIMP Dressed la flags and banting the BiloxL Miss fleet passes in review en its way into the Gulf ef Mexlce to start the shrimping season. Police Hold 20 Bicycles Like many a cautious merchant the Salem police department was trying Saturday to reduce its in ventory on used bicycles, an item that patrolmen bring to the sta tion and tag when found aban doned on city streets and alleys. Twenty of the unclaimed ve hicles are now in storage, and police hope that people who have lost them during the past two years will drop by the station and establish ownership. They also suggested that all bi cycle owners keep a record of the vehicles serial numbers, to help identify them in event they are stolen. FIRE IN SOUTH OREGON GRANTS PASS, Aug. 20 A 150-acre fire in slashings and second-growth timber near the California border was brought un der control today. Seventy-five men controlled it, after it had burned through the night fPffllmlS) Jlu$U- ; VOU take a look-and your fingers 1 f7 itch to get hold of its waiting wheel. ATTiTTflT I u an cye over ts gleaming new 77?r AT liftf TIDfffll 1 bumper-guard grille, its tapering fenders, I rtr ri l II lijUy " : its jet-plane lines and know that this 1 M j : is what others have been groping for. TEX- S Tit MR ES Omlg Bmiek SPECIAL hmm mil theme FemtmremX VLAfTK-HAHDr SZM . MOST tOO KX TW MOCT DYMAA.OW OSTVI iptiinml ml ntr, ml XT-UHi STTUNO NON40CXMO mVMPa-OUJUtD CMXB f3HJtfS3Utf fROAU StAIOHT-BGHT CNGM CO SnUNGMQ AU AJtOUH lOW-MBSLtf 1KB on SAmr-ccs turns STtMr-tana roeocsvruu oervi cetAiar vtsmurtKm AMAH S-UOeXMO lUBOAGf UDS IMU9 SMAffT MOCBS WRN BOOT IT KHBt When hetter mmfmfhUem Record Attendance At Shakespeare Festival ASHLAND, Aug. 2 -Ph The Oregon Shakespearean Festival is drawing record attendance this season. Last night for the second straight evening there was a record crowd watching "Romeo and Juliet." Nearly 700 were there. Near sell outs are expected for the four plays to be given before the drama program ends August 24. CRASH VICTIM IDENTIFIED LEBANON. Aug. 20 A motorcyclist killed at Sweet Home yesterday was identified today as Ballard Turvey, 29, Seligman, Mo., He had been visiting a sister, Mrs. Omar Scroggin at Sweet Home. GRAIN LEAVES ASTORIA ASTORIA, Aug. 20 -V The first grain exported from this port since the 1920's went aboard the P & T Explorer today. Other grain ships are expected to fol low. hmUt BUI CM - - f n i . x ;"; :" n w OoicU -Ofcia ,, Y B, the ln sisc, I . nevf tnPecC3 1 Oft - - . t ' ;i it Mary Taves' j j Bites Monday Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Taves, 37, former Salem resident who died Friday at a Portland hospital, will be held at 11 a.m. Monday at the Holman-Hankins-Rilance chapel in Oregon i City. Interment will be in Mountain View cemetery there. A resident of Oregon City," she is survived by her widower, Roy, and three children, William, Mary Lou and Carol Ann Taves,; all of Oregon City, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Rowland, sr. of Salem. v f Stale i Finance Co r..t v c FHA Loans a -Time Farm Loans License 8-21C and M-222 Personal and Ante Leans t a a , l-x - I TOUtCrriO GttATRVAU arslf hrnit 1 1 So TTJoDgodd GnfltPl Larceny Case Richard D. Bolander, 358 H N. 21st st, received a 30-day sus pended jail sentence and was placed on probation for one year in Marion county district court Saturday after pleading guilty to a charge of larceny. Bolander was arrested Thursday by city police on a warrant charg ing him with larceny of a five gallon gasoline can from F. G. Reynolds. Also in district court, Tommie Andy Kimery,- Mill City, was or dered to plead Monday to a charge of driving while intoxicated early Saturday morning in Mill City. He was arrested by state police and is being held in the county jail in lieu of $350 bail. Malheur Replaces Striking Workers ONTARIO, Aug. 20 -JP)- Mal heur countv began renlarinv to day 25 county road workers who! went on strike. i Six were sent out on bridge construction. Four others were! hired to begin work Monday. j j Births FOWLER To Mr. and Mrs. Ar thur Fowler, Monmouth, a son, Friday, August 19, at Salem Gen eral hospital. Nothing Down, Pay Monthly VENETIAN BLINDS And Shades We also wash, re tape, paint and reslat your old Venetian Blinds. ELMER - THE BLIND MAN Call Any Time For Free Estimates Phone 3-7328 1453 Rnge St W. Salem We Give S&H Green Stamps Cold Wave $750 and up The 4 Corners Beauty Shop Plenty of Free Parking Space Thnra., 4 Fri. Eve. by Appointment Phone X-200 3905 E. State St You slip inside. Twelve inches added to rear-seat cushions emphasize the biggest interiors you can buy for the money. A broad, curving windshield set in nar rower corner posts means a better view any way y ou look. Now touch the throttle. Not just high compression power, but high-rttr Fireball power, to get the most from to day's fuels today! You finger the controls not just stand ard transmission alone, but the magic smoothness of Dynaflow Drive at your Option. OftiuU mi mtrm tt specMuyttow Easterh'BanlcBnyg Wooden Niclcels DES MOINES -OTV Don't take a wooden nickel? The Chase Na tional Bank of New York City does, and pays for them. Leo Spaeth, promotional director for the 42nd Annual Pilot Rock plow ing match in Cherokee has re ceived a letter from the bank. DOES t off OF SUCCESS and I1APPKJUSS? Here's new hope for the hard of hearing. Thousands have discovered that a Beltone hearing aid restores them to normal business and social life . . . htlps them hear clearly again without strain. The tiny one-unit Beltone is so easy to wear. No separate battery pack. No dangling battery wires. Unsurpassed for power and clarity. No Button In the Ear Hide your deafness with (he new Beltone Pbsntomold. People won't notice you wear a bearing aid. Gome in, phone or mail cou pon today foe FREE booklet that tells all the amazing facts. 0 MONO-MC Om-U.II Special Salem SEE IT Salem Beltone Headquarters 228 Oregon Building AUGUST 24-25 9:00 A. M. to 5:00 P. M. Evening Appointments! Batteries for all aids, .femes N. Taft St Asseclates - ttS Oregon Bid. Tmm to HFNr J. Try it in traffic-and less length bumper-to-bumper makes it a dream to park or han dle. Try it on the road, and seats placed ahead of the rear axle add even more comfort to that unequaled Buick ride. . So you say, "How much?" maybe bracing yourself mentally. Then you learn that price Is part of the good news too! Figures fit the modest budget as this handy-dandy fits the modest garage and you get room, power, ride, and the smartest look on wheels at the lowest price you'll find on any valvein head eight! So you size It all up with a happy "Buick done it again!" and see your Buick dealer quick as you can. After all, the quickest way to get one. of these into your garage is to get a firm order in! . . - .B k- Bt rT JWaoden nickels are . beta . is sued in Cherokee county to adver tise 'the ma t ch es. ' Vernon L. Brown, curator of the Chase Na tional Bank collection of moneys of the world, explained in his let- ' ter to Spaeth that the bank has an extensive display of wooden nickels in its exhibit He asked for two pieces' each of the one and two nickel denominations. A money order for 30 cents was en- closed. j CGoirDuj IE Hi HMrtn, AM Hearing Clinic TRY IT TAUO. A8C NtlwJ. tvry IWtf Wt. s : 1 -I -i 164 S. Commercial Salem 388 N. Commercial St. '.- "'-i : f . Salem, Oregon