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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1950)
Mrs. M. Jory The Statotman., -Salem,, Pfoon andaYt McrT,? J-rf ' i I II Mill Mi in 1UU wA'i . ii ifiiiiiiiii m !; Newport Settfvt Ciffititoc&'MayW-l'A KEITH ELECTED 4 Gordon Keith, a past president cf th, Salem Junior Chamber of Commerce, was elected vice pres ident of the state Jaycee organi sation during a convention : in Eugene Sunday. Thirteen mem bers of the Salem Junior chamber, led by President Lawrence Moore, attended the week end meeting. Mike Paiiek Brake & Motor Ser vice will be closed a few days while moving to 1233 So. 12th S Watch - fori opening announcement, Ohmart for Representative. P ad. ELECTED TO HONORARY Porter S. Woods, son of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Woods of Salem, hs been elected to the Sphinx club at Brown university. Providence, R. I., where he is a sophomore. The club la an honorary of under graduates, graduates and faculty to stimulate intellectual fellow ships. Woods is assistant librarian ot the Brown glee dub and was chairman of, the vigilance com mitee in charge of freshman ori entation. - . , , ' , i Johns ManvllJe ,. shingles applied I by MathU Bros., 184 S,; Cora'l Tree estimates. 3. ; New; class in Gregg Shorthand DID YOU KNOW that I come to Simplified and other commercial your home to help you with your t classes -May 9. capita . Business figure problem7 Call 3-0072. College Phone S5987. ! ' - (DUNN VISITS SALEM BREAK-IN INVESTIGATED state -Senator Austin Dunn, ciiy police aunaay were invest Baker, candidate for the state su tigating a report that- someone preme court, was a Salem visitor broke into the office at Shrocks Sunday. He addressed a democra tised car i lot. Beach avenue and meeting at campaign head- Portland 1 road, late Saturday quarters here. i night A front door- window was , . . smashed and the door was found Wanted: building lot in city limits, open but nothing apparently was 838 N 20h. Ph. 21005. .. stolen. .. ; -' .. , New ice delivery. Prompt & neat fl Mt'Tl service. Commercial & residen- Church, Monday. May 8, to 4. J'J&f??! L "Jf' UlORSE AT CHAMBER Speaker at tne saiem cnamoer BLOOD COLLECTION HERE of Commerce Tnnen ??a!i The Red Cross bloodmobile noon wm u. oen.; from Portland will be in Salem Morse or Oregon, lie wm report Tuesdar i at Evaneelist TemDle. on recent developments in tne na Market street-and Park avenue, tions capital. With a coal of 100 nints of blood. persons who have not been sched- dTf T umlkni uled as donors are asked to come VJL" J-illlllJJCr in also: Hours have been changed ' . Union Of fered we now xi vc in iuuiuuu u uu regular service a completely pri vate banquet room for service clubs or private parties up to 50 people. The Spa Restaurant, 382 State Street Phone 3-5419. ; 21c Increase KIWANIANS SLATE MUSJC i A May music week program, featuring Salem school children, will be presented at the Tuesday noon luncheon meeting of the Sa lem Kiwanis club, under the di- PORTLAND, Ore., May 7-AV The major lumbering employers' group of the Pacific northwest announced today it 'I had offered CIO Woodworkers a 2 cent an hour wage increase plus a health and life insurance program. The offer was made in a move Hearing Aid users, fresh batteries for all makes just arrived, new 1S50 Beltone, 26 smaller, 16 lighter, free demonstration. James Taft St -Associates, 228 Oregon Bldg. Ph. 24491. Closing out entire stock, prices slashed, , 1 everything goes, open until 9 p.m. evenings, Wallery's Men's Wear, 1993 Fairgrounds Rd. Ph. 2-5566. Dallas! man arrested John L. Frieson, Dallas, was -ar rested by city ponce officers Sun- 'i """"" '-' 1 " '"" ' "1 " " ' I -, ... .... .. ,":ta - ' A - 'rr 4 ' -. . . " M K ' ,V NEWPORT, May 7 These girls will reign at Newport's Eighth Annual Crab festival, to be held May 12, 13, and 14. Left t rigbt-LeoIa Tedrow, Waldport; Berta White. EddyvlUe; Queen Matue Harris, To , ledo; Lavonne Winget Newport; Mar jorie Erickson; Siletz; Peggy Holger, North Lincoln. . Wednesday Mrs. Mary M. Jory. a Salem resident more than 45 years, died Sunday at ber home at 1669 s. Capitol st: after a 14-year illness. She observed her 74th birthday last Friday. 1:;: Mary Trance was born May 5, 1876, - in .Vernon county . in Mis souri and came to Oregon in , 1834. She was a member of the Presby terian church. - i . Survivors include her widower. Earl H. Jory, Salem; a daughter, Mrs. Florence K: Baer, Portland; two sons, Wilbur K." Jory, Salem, and Eldon E. Jory, Highgrove, Caur.; a sister, Mrs. Dorothy Don all,' Sakm: a brother, Wilbur K, France," Petersburg, Alaska? i niece in Portland and three grand children.-'. ." ; ' Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday from the V. T. Golderf chapel. - Dr. Chester W. Hamblin will .fficiate with inter ment in Belcrest Memorial park. rection of Vern Wiscarson. The to avert a utrike scheduled by the meeting will be at 4he Marion ho- International Woodworkers Of teL r I America for May 15. Walter A. Durham, jr., secre Rosd oilin oh. 2-4151 eves. 3-5769 tary for the Lumbermen's Indus Trial ne.iauons committee, s&ia the offer was submitted to the un ion's contract negotiators last night . . Offer Detailed Durham said the LIRC, repre senting most of the Douglas fir mills of western Washington and northwest Oregon, had offered: 1. A' $3,000 company paid life insurance policy, paying double the Value for accidental death or dismember tnnt. 2. Company paid sick and ac cident insurance providing $25 a week up to 26 weeks for any ac cident or tlness. 3. Hospital, medical and surgi day afternoon and charged with C8j contracts to be paid equally reckless driving, liquor involved, by the worker and the employer. He was released after he posted 4. A 2Vi cent an hour boost in- 1150 balL . - - j .: stead of pmd holidays. . . .. . . Union officials had no immedi- Ohmart for:Representative, P ad . ate comment The negotiating TOASTMASTERS MEET ' j ; rouP we scheduled to meet Frank Hamstreet wiU be acting aInl ?rao"ows wi!h deral toastmaster at a meeting Tuesday ConcUiation Service Commissiort night of the Willamette Toast- er Leo Kotm. masters club in the Brieht Snot Demands Set Forth cafe at 6:15 o'clock. Slated speak- IWA President James Fadling ers Include Herman Holboke, Roy said the union members voted the Green. Fred Brennan. George Ha- striKe to dsck up aemanas lor High Speed at Nielit Cited as Bad Practice ley and Joseph Thomas. Ceremony for Bergman Held eNot Imminent' the $3,000 life insurance; sick benefits of $40 a week for 26 weeks; workmen's accident com pensation of $20 for 26 weeks on top of the state benefits; an em ployer paid hospital, medical and surgical program and holidays. The .union and negotiators for three employer groups have been negotiating since April. The other employer groups are the Oregon Coast and Willamette Valley as ROME,; May 7-UP)-Roberto Ros sellinL Italian film director, said sociations. here today he was still undecided Today's LIRC announcement whether 1 to marry - in Italy or was the first indication of how abroad He said he has "two or far the employers were willing to three" possibilities but bs marri- go in meeting the union's de age with Swedish actress Ingrid mands The IWA had ignored Bergman was "not imminent" wages this year and bid only for ; He added that it was his desire welfare programs that were ask when it will be decided where and when to marry, to "hold the cere mony privately." ' Rossellini was reported yester- day; to have been in Lugano, Swit zerland, with Miss Bergman to ar range hismarriage ceremony. Explosion Rocks Train; 2 Killed ISTANBUL, Turkey, May 7-) Two persons were killed and two others critically injured today in an i explosion which rocked a Greek train at the Turkish-Greek- -Bulgarian frontier. The train' hit i ed but not won in past years. McCnllougli Cliief Of Lumber Group . . i PORTLAND. May 7 -JFl- The Western Forest Industries associa-, tion elected Frank ' McCullough, Eugene, president last night. Other officers named at the one day session ' include: Lee Evans, Frmevule, v first vice president; Ralph Woodruff, Trout i Lake, Wash., second vice president; Wil liam Essestrom, Elkton, Ore., third vice . president; George ;Owen Eugene, secretary-treasurer. itockeam1 leading to Europe. rr.ii j yi uew ivnieu Births SYDNEY, Australia, May 1-(JP) A royal Australian Catalina fly- inff boat crash(H and hurct intn alUSJII lO AIT. and Mr I f1nm whi ttmntfnif tlfnmut Ralph Storm, Salem route 3, a son, landing on an airstrip at George Sunday, May 7, at Salem General town, North Queensland, ! today, immu., . v , 'gluing five or her crew of seven More Than 250 Dancers Turn Armory Into a 'United Nations9 At Gate Stringers Annual tete More than 250 dancers from 15 clubs in western Oregon turned the Salem armory into a "United Nations" Sunday aftejtaoon as they enjoyed dances of nearly every part of the world. I - The occasion was the second annual Cherry Blossom Folk Re creational festival sponsored by the Salem Gate Swingers" as the final event on the 1949-50 social calendar. . ; .1 Between 450 and 500 specta tors filled a majority of seats in the armory balcony to watch brightly - costumed European, American , and Latin American variations of folk-dancing. The four-hour program opened with Mrs. E. Donald Jessop of Salem singing "America the Beautiful" and with a welcome to visiting dancers by Neil Brown, president of the Salem club, who said: j ' T thia 4vn nf Kvotlt that helps fill leisure hours, builds a friendly spirit among communi ties of Oregon and helps create better understanding of customs in foreign countries." Along with the fast-moving foreign dances, the festival feat ured old - fashioned American squares and exhibitions by the ONO and ONT clubs of Portland, the International Folk Dancers, inc., of Portland and the Oregon State college; physical education department j Alice Ward, instructor of the Salem club, circulated among dancers throughout the afternoon, instructing novices in steps of dances which were new to them. Clubs from Salem, Scio, Port land, Ashland,. Eugene, Dallas, Taft, McMinnville and Silverton were represented at the festival. ect Bids Largest v Northwest Any vehicle traveling more than 50 miles an hous at night is a menace to highway safety, the state traffic safety division de clared Sunday. ! Officials gave an example. "At nicht a driver cannot clearly see an object or danger situation at more than 200 feet A reasonably quick driver, traveling 50 miles an hour, requires 186 feel to stop, if his auto has good brakes, they said. The traffic division pointed out that 37 per cent of Oregon s traf fic deaths last year were charged to excessive speed. ' "Slow down and save a life," they warned.. Mice Causing Considerable! Root Damage By Lilue L.; Madsen Farm Editor. The Statesman Root damage from -field mice is being reported j as quite ex tensive this spring.! Heavier damage ; than, usual is laid to the snow covering during the winter. Mice have made runs beneath many-rows ofxstrawber ries and cane fruit, particularly beneath cane fruit iwere extensive mulching - has been practiced. Roots suffer considerable damage when, the row is used for one or more mouse tunnels, growers re port. Not only do the mire eat off many of the roots but they leave air pockets ijvhich in them selves dry out the': roots. John ! Inskeep, county agent in Clackamas county , said this week that tons of grey squirrel poison ! had been distributed each year and that grey diggers have been greatly lessened in recent years. But while all thei attention, In skeep pointed out, has been turned on the diggers, . field mice and moles have been:! increasing in berry and grassland acreages. Inskeep reported further that many farmers in his area have had excellent results in ridding fields of mice by using poisoned grain obtained from the; county exten sion oince. lin cans are being used, turned upside down over the grain, particularly where the runs are found, toj prevent birds from obtaining thei poison and to protect the poison! from rainfall. Old Torpedo Fatal to Eight HIROSHIMA, Japan, May 7-) A Japanese diver found an old torpedo offshore and decided it might be worth salvaging for its materials. He struck it with his hammer yesterday. The resulting explosion killed the diver, Keichi Otani, 48, and seven other per sons. As many as 80 hairs sprout from a single chinchilla hair follicle. Ifs a Tasty Treat Especially If If s "Delicious Curls Milk"! TOIHGIIT! 8:15 P. 11. Attend The- Willamette UnlTartity'c 1 6m Melvin Gelat. Director PBOF. RALPH DOSES ! GUEST PIANIST 8:15 al the Salen High School Andilerinn j Adm. 1.25 tax incld. . Benefit Salem Rotary Club's Willamette University Scholar ship Fund. ! CURLY'S Your Friendly Home Owned Dairy Phono 3-8783 The largest engineering pro ject in the - northwest on which bids were, entered during 'April was at Lookout Point dam on the middle fork of the Willamette river in Linn county. This was revealed Sunday by Pacific Builder and Engineer, con struction trade journal in Seattle, which also pointed out that April engineering projects in the north west totaled $32,363,184, more than double March's total. ' Apparent low bidder for com pletion of an earth embankment structure nd for construction of a concrete spillway at Lookout Point was .the Morrison, Knudsen, company, inc., of Boise, Idaho, on a $18,699,531 bid, the magazine reported. , Willamette Alumni Meet Wednesday At Lusanne Hall Spring meeting of Salem Alum ni association of Willamette uni versity has been called for Wed nesday by Ervin Potter, presi dent. The dinner meeting will be- gin at 6 p.m. at Lausanne hall. A report will be made by the nominating committee, Lena Johnson, Dr. Charles Carey and Mrs. Ollie Williams. Guests will include Coach Ches ter Stackhouse, Dr. G. Herbert Smith, president of Willamette, and Travis Ctxfs,; director of in formation and alumni affairs. The program will be brief. Public Records MUNICIPAL COUET Robert Werner &ieder, 340 E. Rural ave., charged with driving while intoxicated, posted $350 baiL J. S.Jones, 59, Fruit Grower y Dies in Hospital James "Sydney Jones, 59. Salem area fruit grower, died Sunday at a local hospital. He had been ill about a year. Jones was born July 13. 1890. at Wythvillftf Va. and came to Salem in 1925. He lived recently at 4120 Jones rd. and was a member of the Baptist church and the Ma sonic lodge, both in Virginia. m 1914 Jones was married at Chilhowie, Van to Lilly Davis, who survives in Salem. Also surviving are a aaugnter, Mrs. Ruby Cogs well, Seattle; a son, Elbert E. Jones, Salem; two sisters,! Mrs. Bessie Windle and Mrs. Katherine Mink, both in Virginia; and four grandchildren. Funeral services will be ar ranged by the V. T, Golden cha-pel. Boy Recovers Memory -He's To Go South A 16-year-old boy, who told of ficers he had lost his memory, re gained it Sunday morning with a little prodding from state hospital attendants here. The boy identified himself to Marion county sheriff officers as Clive Cunningham, who had dis appeared from his San Francisco, Calif home. Fie had been picked up in Corvallis Friday and had told officers he could remember nothing prior to last Wednesday. Sheriff C. N. Lilly of Benton county, who brought the lad to the state hospital here Saturday, has ! returned him to Corvallis. Sheriff Lilly said he would contact the boy's parents in California for return. -4 GIVES S&H . GREEN STAMPS ,vtrtrtiS(l 1 washers con&inedl ! i - -1 I' 1 SE :-.:., :-5S i; I i WW Jill if Ii i i i l . i i mm f lirtilJlX '1 twBwe ( 1 aafcMBtic I l IN FOl A Of OHSTAJIOM ;TODATI ! n n .no t CONVENIENT TERMS' ! ! I I? Uew Baidix Gyramatic No bolting1 down! Exclusive Beodix XPkter-Ratloner! Dynt-Surge; rumblc-sction washing! Saves up to 1 10 yearly on soap alone! Washes, rinses 3 times, damp-drys automatically! Automaticloap injector (optional) a i A jr . oni lUW BendtX DC lUXe-Weal for petmanene inVallatioi'. Dyna-Surge tumble-action washing! Jli ple-rinsing-rdamp-drying ! 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