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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1949)
! H u J i . i : (DutLy News IBrneffs CARS COLLIDE - Minor damage to two cars re- tulted in a collision at Marion and Liberty streets about 2:45 p.Nm. Sunday, city police reported. They listed the drivers as David R. Cra ven, 859 N. Liberty St., and Jo Ann Smith, Portland. Karakul Karpet It's new, it's re versible, it's 100 virgin wool and woven through and through, only $4.85 sq. yd. Ph. 3-'t 648 or 3-3364. Free Thanksgiving Day Turkey with the purchase of a new West- inghouse or Universal electric range, Yeater Appliance C., 375 Chemeketa. Extensive line of gifts and hard ware, housewares, china and sporting goods. Use our 10 lay away plan. Salem Hardware Co., 120 N. Commercial. BOYS BREAK WINDOW A small piece of metal which smashed through a window at 1580 Center st Sunday morning was investigated by city police. They said an 11-year-old boy threw it. He told them he had been aiming at a tree. Restitution was promised. The object . landed in an apart ment occupied by Mrs. Leo Pospl sil, police said. , Insured savings earn more than two per cent at Salem Federal Savings Association, 560 State st Nancy's Nursery, by day, hr. Ph. 24940. Johns-Manvllle shingles applied by Mathis . Bros., 164 S. Com'l. Free estimates. Ph. 34642. CHURCH PLANS DINNER Plans for a turkey dinner to be served by St Vincent de PayJ Catholic church on Sunday, De cember 4, were announced yes terday by Mrs. E. Moon, general chairman. - Cooked food and Bazaar tale Gas Co. Nov. 22. Neighbors of Wood craft U of O Theatre Group to Take Play on Tour ' EUGENE,"1 Nov. 20 A traveling company of Frederick Jackson's The Bishop Misbehaves" will play for Oregon communities out side Eugene this winter. The University of Oregon theatre will offer the show under the direction of Mrs. Ottilie T. Seybolt, asso ciate professor of speech. ; The show, designed solely for traveling, will be available early In December for an indefinite period. The company will make overnight trips on week ends and mid-week dates will be played Within a 0-mile radius of Eugene. i "The Bishop Misbehaves" will play under the auspices of high schools, service clubs or other or ganizations. All expenses con nected with royalty payments and transportation will be paid by the University theatre from its half share of the gross income. Food, lodging, publicity and ether expenses connected with the local production will be carried by the sponsoring organization. No minimum guarantee will be asked. Croups interested in sponsoring the show in their community have been asked to contact Horace W. Rabjnson of the University theatre. YM Party Clinic to Feature Games Games like Go-Mo-Ku, Nine Men's Morris and Dutch Tactics, outgrowths of national cultures, are some of those to be taught at the Salem YMCA party clinic session Tuesday at 8 p.m. Carl Grelder, YM personnel secretary, Is the instructor for this meeting. Explanation of these pastimes, as well as work in nuzzles and puzzlecraft, will be given at the public clinic, one or a series. - Births LAPIN To Mr. and Mrs. Adam Lanin. Salem route 2. box 215.1 a daughter, Saturday, November JL9. at Salem General hospital. WYMORE To Mr. and Mrs Clyde Wymore, Salem route 2, box J35C, a son, Sunday November 20, at Salem General nospitai. McPHERSON . To Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. McPherson, 195 S. 25th st, a daughter, Sunday, No vember -20, at Salem General hos pital. ' -" CARRUTH .To Mr. and Mrs. Frank J, Carruth, 425 N. Cottage t., a son, Sunday, November 20, at Salem General hospital. WOODS To Mr. and Mrs. Lynn T. Woods, Woodburn, a daughter, Sunday, November 20, at Salem . General hospital. HANNEGAN To Mr. and Mrs Harold Hannegan, 158 Duncan ave., a son, Sunday, November 20, at Salem Memorial hospital. KWPERS To Mr. and Mrs. . Henry Kuipers, Scio, a daughter, Saturday, November 19, at Salem Memorial hospital. FREE BALLONS! Te all the kiddie all this week aj ACE'S CLASSIC BARBER SHOP The most modern barber shop la Salem . Located la the new j; Capitol Shopping Center ! We ase the new sterilising eases,! which means ear equipment Is ander eentlnnal sterilixaUon when net North End of Sear 1111 REFUGEE TO SPEAK Dr. Joseph Veic, who fled com m u n i s t - dominated Yugoslavia shortly after World War II, will speak at Salem Kiwanis club -luncheon Tuesday noon at the Marion hotel. Dr. Veic is now on the staff of Oregon state hos pital, i jj , Lost: Downtown: Sat. P.M.,smaJl coin purse containing change and safety deposit box key No. 2127. If found keep change and return purse & key to Vera Zielinske, 795 South St. ph. 3-9010. Vision-Aid means Semler ; made For glasses ground to your optom etrist's prescription get Vision -Aid glasses at Semler Optical Of fices, Waters-Adolph Bldg., State & Commercial. Phone 3-3311. TO TELL OF TRAVELS "A few observations on Paris and London, politically and ; soc ially" will be given by Dr. George D. Hocking of Willamette uni versity at Salem .Rotary club luncheon Wednesday noon at the Marion hotel. Hocking is head of the department of Romance lan guages, i Choice chrysanthemums 75c to $2 doz. ph. 2-8471 I, Finest grade Utah lump coal by sack or bulk. Phone 2-2436. Cap ital City Transfer Co. ran a i V1112 Service Set oups A Thanksgiving worship ser vice for the public, sponsored by YMCA school groups, will be presented Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Waller Hall at Willamette uni versity. The program will be pre sented Jointly by Hi-Y, Junior Hi-Y, Gra-Y and the campus Y. Guests speaker: will be Dc. U. G. Dubach of Lewis and Clark college On "Why Be Thankful." Hi-Y boys presenting the ser vice are: call to worship, Jim Boone; responsive reading, Daryl Girod; scripture reading, Gilbert Batesonr offering, introduction, Merlin Schulze; i introduction of speaker, ; Robert Meany; benedic tion, Gordon Sloan. . The YMCA boys choir will sing "Come Ye Thankful People, Come'V 5 YMCA clubs participating are Hi-Y Arthur Cotton, Harrison Elliott and Abel Gregg; Junir Hi-Y George Williams, Dwight Edwards, John Gardner, Law rence Doggett, J, C. Clark and Tracy Strong; Gra-Y Englewood and Lincoln. The ushers will be Junior Hi-Y boys? and the collec tion wilt be taken by Gra-Y. About 200 boys will participate. Salem Men in Speech Meet A student from Salem and professor who graduated from Willamette university are among the host leaders at Stanford uni versity for the annual Western Speech association debate tourna ment opening today. A Willam ette forensic team is participat ing. ?; Tom Brand, son of Justice and Mrs. James Brand of Salem, is Stanford debate; manager and general ! tournament chairman. Prof. Leland Chapin, a Willamette alumnus, was chairman for pre- liminary planning. ear ChestjQuota SUt'tmaB N'ewi Service amity, Nov. zo Amity is on Its way toward; becoming the second town in Yamhill county to complete its Community chest quota, Mrs. Clarence Hendershot, county chairman, reported today. To date $436 has been reported in the drive for a $550 goal, P. E. Meeker, Amity drive director, said. Carlton was the first town in the county to go over the top in its program recently. Dean Dubach to Address Older Boys Conference Preparations for the annual Old er Boys conference, set for De cember 2 and 3, get into full swing this Week as locaj committees visit neighboring high schooTs to invite delegates. Dr. U. G. Dubach of Lewis and Clark college will be the chief speaker, as for many years. ; j; Merlin Schulze of Salem high school is president of the confer ence and is leading the groups who will extend invitations for the I meeting at Salem YMCA. Dele gates will come from Marion, Polk and VamhiJl counties. This year's meeting will empha size employment problems, poten tialities ; and preparation. Bid. Facing Unioa St. Union St. j llianksei j i o By Ybr Amitv N Lack of Funds Blocks Farm Surplus Plan WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 -JPh Doubt that congress would vote financial support stood in the way today of a proposal for a world food bank aimed at moving farm surpluses to needy areas at cut rate prices. The proposal will be advanced at the annual meeting of the United Nations food and agricul ture organization convening here tomorrow. The plan will be out lined by FAO Director-general N. E. Dodd, former US. under secretary of agriculture. An official source said the United States delegation to the 58-nation conference will explain that this country is not able to endorse the food bank plan with out congressional approval. U.S. Must Supply The bank or clearing house would have an eventual capital of $5,000,000,000, the bulk of which this country would be call ed upon to supply. This country s initial contribution would be about $450,000,000, it was' said. The clearing house would take surpluses supplied by producing areas and sell them to shortage areas. The buying countries could pay in acceptable or convertible currency and get the goods at a cut-rate. Or they could pay in a so-called "sort or present;, inconvertible currency at the full market price. : . Endorsement Sought This government's reluctance to endorse the FAO proposal was said to grow out of apparently growing congressional resistence to government spending and par ticularly of the foreign relief or aid nature. Dodd and other proponents of the world food bank idea are expected to argue that the United States faces the prospect of spend ing hundreds of millions of dollars a year to finance crop control programs' designed to prevent pro duction of surpluses. It would be better for this country aSjWell as shortage areas, Dodd will say, if the money were spent to move the surpluses into consumption. New Theatre To Open Dec. 2 At University EUGENE. Nov. 20 -i Formal opening of the new University of Oregon theatre will be December 2 with the first performance of Maxwell Anderson's "Winterset" Dates of the show are December 2, 3, and 7-10. The new theatre on the old cam pus seats about 4uo. ine dox office will be open to the general public for reservations from No vember 28, through the next two weeks. It is in the lobby of the new treatre. February 3, 4, 8, 9 and 10 are the dates of the second show, "The Bishop Misbehaves." "The War rior's Husband" by Julian Thomp son is planned for early in March. The fourth show will be F. Flo tow's "Martha" in April. David Bellasco's rarely played "The Girl I Left Behind Me" will close the season on May 26, 27, 30, 31, and June 1. Director will be H. W. Robinson. Positions Open in Army's Mountain Combat Forces The army has several openings for enlistments in the 14th regi mental combat team, famed mountain unit stationed at Camp Carson, Colo., according to Salem army and air force recruiting station. The combat team specializes In skiing and mountain climbing. Applicants need not have previous military service, providing they are between 18 and. 34 years of age. The 14th operates as an in dependent force, having; its own infantry, artillery and engineers. 700-Voicc U. of O. Choral Group to Present 'Messiah' EUGENE, Nov. 20 University of Oregon's 700-voice choral un ion will once again on December 11 present, to the community and state, "The Messiah." j Directed by the music school's Dean Theodore Kratt, the music of Handel and . the stirring story of the birth of Christ will re presented in Mc Arthur court on the campus at 8 o'clock. It will go on the air so that! listeners throughout the state may hear the program. The university adopted the ora torio tradition in 1941 with i smaller choral union, directed by Dean Kratt. Tu AT Wholesale ORDER NOW Hens Took V. 8. Inspected N I s Phone 2-3555 9 A. KL8 P. M. rkeys MP - t- , DETROIT An unidentified eperator escaped oninjnred here last week when this giant crane toppled j ever the edge of an access read high above the Detroit dam site. Another few feet and the crane 1 would have plunged down the steep bank. The pbto, taken by a dam construction worker, shews crew- men working to right the machine. The 50-foot boom bangs ever the bank. State Milk Administrator Tells Jersey Cattle Club 5 Per Cent Milk Better Buy for Consumer By Lillle L. Madsea Farm F-dltor, Th Statesman QUINABY, Nov. 20 "Five per cent milk is a much better buy for the consumers than is 3.5 but they don't know that. Nobody ever told them," Thomas L. Ohlsen, state milk administrator, told a large group of Jersey breeders at the Marion County Jersey Cattle club meeting held at the RNA hall here today. "The preference of the public for the lower test milk isn't because of quality but because pf price. No one has explained that the buyer actually gets more for his money when he puts out the extra few cents for 5 per cent milk than he pays for the 3.5," Ohlsen insisted as he explained to his listeners that the steps to increase the sales of grade A milk are "really an in dustry problem." The dairy industry is up against dairy substitutes, Ohlsen contin ued. Vegetable oils are being used not only in butter substitutes but also in ice creams. The concerns manufacturing these are continu ously telling the housewife of the benefits of their wares, Ohlsen said, adding that "only occasional ly do you see a small advertise ment about milk or butter. You don't see the dairy folk putting up an extensive campaign to sell their superior product. Instead we let our competitors take our market right away from us while we sit around wondering what we can do about it." Oldest Industry He gave statistics showing the downward trend in the average use of fluid milk and particularly in the use of butter. And yet, he said, selling of milk was the oldest in d us try in America and still the leading agricultural industry, Uhlsen assured nis listeners tnat the price of milk was and probably would be continued to be set on the price of production. If the consumer doesn t pay for the cost of production and a little plus, he won't have milk very ong. That applies to every product consumed, not only milk," he said. Steady Flow of Milk In Portland, Ohlsen said that while milk sales are up 500 pounds butterfat a day over September, and that he was of the opinion the upward trend in the use of milk in Portland was here to stay, this was also the first fall since 1942 that Portland had had enough milk in the slack season. This, he ex plained, was because of the en forcement of the 60-day basic rul ing whereby if a producer drops below his basic supply for 60 days his basic is given to someone else. Through this, consumers are learn ing to keep a steady flow of milk instead of a heavy flow in the spring and a very light flow in the fall. Ohlsen also told that the 10 per REDDI-WIP IS Crane Topples at Detroit Dam Prdject r; V cent milk has very nearly replac ed the sale of the 22 per cent cream. Neal - Miller, Woodburn, presi dent, directed the meeting. At a brief business session which fol lowed Ohlsen's talk, the group voted to hold the December meet ing on December 11 instead of the 18. The December state director's meeting wll be held in Salem De cember 14. Psi Chi Elects Pat Sebastian. Pat Sebastian, senior in psycho logy from Salem is the first presi dent of Psi Chi, psychological as sociation organized on the Willa mette university campus last week. Named to assist her were Jerry Thorn, Portland, vice president; Margaret Austin, .Coos Bay, sec retary; La Fyrne Showacy, Port land, treasurer; Lyle Parke, Sa lem, historian, and Dean Barn hart, Salem, publicity chairman. This was the third meeting of the club. Its constitution and petition for national recognition will be presented to the student council soon. FOR INSURED SAVINGS first Federal Savings first Current Dividend 2Va 1 st Federal Savings and Loan Ass'n. 142 So. Liberty CTBA&m en TntHWl9 m iHCJKV KmrriltAtitP&R.YAN firio PflSSCD ON TO YOU Br CURLY'SPfMRY .DISTRIBUTORS OffTEPDI WfP AVAILABLE AT MOST GROCERY STORES IN SALEM OR PHONE CURLY'S DAIRY 3-8783 -V ,'-4. A' 1 Of Camera Club to Hold Discussion Of Yuletide Photos s Christmas (arrangements will be the subject Tuesday night when Salem Camera club meets at First Methodist church. Mrs. Lewis Judson and Mrs. Jo seph Van Cleve of Salem Garden club will make the arrangements for the camera fans". Robert ijt. Stutzman will talk to the group on the subject of lighting forj portrait work. Inter ested persons are invited to at tend, i Bill Robinson in Critical Condition NEW YCjjRK, Nov. 20-OP)-Bill Robinson, 71 -year-old Negro tap dancer, renjiains In critical condi tion, the Columbia-Presbyterian medical center said today. The hospital said that Robinson, under treatment for a heart ail ment, sun is in an oxygen tent but that hf is "holding his own against the: illness. HAVE BROKEN AUTO GLASS ! REPLACED TODAY! Salem Glass Service 452 Center Th Statagmcm, Salem, Oregon. French Reje ct Poles' Charge Of Espionage j WARSAWj Poland, Nov. 20-(p)- j French circles here said tonight i that charges of espionage placed i against a French consular official ' by the communist Polish govern-: ment are nonsense. The Poles Friday arrested ; Andre Simon Robineau, employe i Al ... ' oi . we consulate at azezeem (Stettin), as he was preparing, to board a plane for a vacation in France. The foreign ministry told the French embassy Robineau had been engaging in espionage. The ministry disclosed two other French diplomatic employes had been ordered out of the country. French nationals here said the charges against Robineau resulted from an attack of spy fever aris ing from a new decree protecting state secrets.: Sources close to the embassy said that after hearing Jwo dif ferent accounts of the "incident, embassy officials do not believe Robineau made a confession at tributed to him by the Polish au thorities. They cited the regu larity with which they said "con fessions" are being . obtained in central and eastern European countries (within the Soviet sphere). Public Records MUNICIPAL COURT George Myers, Monmouth, charged with driving while in toxicated; posted 2S0 bail. SAN FRANCISCO ONI WAY f 9.71 ROUND TUP . . . 17.lt Pita rUmlTm Trla Tlclets Oeed far 4 Meats MPOT ! Na. Cbar St. (SC3MDEQEE) mm Don't rbk the possibility of Injury by putting off the replacing of broken windows or wind-shields in your auto. By replacing this broken glass Ifs not only safer, but much moro comfort able. 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