? T frgtcrtasauBn-fejn Of fcrhndaT November I8 1 350 Saforn Shriners Ready to Play Host to Western Oregon Ceremonial f7' - ZTi ,7 x VV' Tf V 17 Big Crowd Attends Salem High Annual Thanlisgiving Festival By Gilbert Bateson Judging by the near capacity crowd that thronged to the Salem high school auditorium last night the second annual Thanksgiving Festival, presented by the music and drama groups at Salem high. j'was a huge success. The program which was sponsored by the Salem high school Band and Orchestra Parents Association, consisted of a musical program and variety show, in the A single worm may spin 400 to 1,000 yards of filament Z Blf Ones! "Bodcy Mountain- Taney Panto" L The anniul western Oreron Shrine ceremonial scheduled for today . ia Salem was arraaied by the Salem committee pictured above. Members are, seated, from left, Jacob Fnhrer, treasurer; John GraybiU, host; T. M. Medferd, parade; Elmer J. Church, general chairman; T. B. Tomlinson, candidates; Claude Post, host; Harris 1,000 Shriners Due Here Today For Annual Ceremonial Meeting Some 1,000 western Oregon Shriners are to be in Salem today for the annual ceremonial meeting, at which approximately 100 candi dates wiU be initiated. A parade at 3 pjn. will be the public feature of the program. Chairman for arrangements is Elmer J. Church of Salem, head ing the western Oregon-Shrine ceremonial committee. Degree work wiU be at Salem armory, while headquarters will be at the Marion noteL . : The schedule will begin at it tun. with a business meeting in Masonic temple. Luncheon will be at the Marion hoteL During the afternoon candidates will be given Instruction by various leaders in cluding T. H. Tomlinson of Salem; Hal Hutchinson, Manley Treece, Don Von Boskirk, Earl Riley, Len Fuller, all of Portland. ' t The parade of uniformed Shrin ers and their candidates, with mu sic by the Al Kader band and 4rum corps from Portland, will jstarTat Ferry and liberty streets, Eeast to cottage, north to Cheme ta, west to Church, south to ..State, west to High, north to Court, west to Liberty and south to ori gin. Marshal will be Fred M. Bay of Portland. i- The Al Kader band and Chant ers will give a concert for Shriners at the armory at 3:45, " ? t First section of the degree will be directed by Frank W. Howell of Portland at 4:15 pm .and the second section by Elmer Wendling jf Portland at 7:45 pjn. Preceding the latter will be a dinner at five Salem restaurants and introduc- . . - J J I. Tl . lion Ol aignuanes, neaooi aj ru tentate Ed Swink of Portland. Candidates File Costs Of Campaigns Expenditures of $6,102 on be half of U.S. Rep. Lowell Stock man 9nii Chrutrrm rfietrirt t iYtm recent general election, were re ported by Mildred Burnham, sec- ;ACbuj v& iuc J mimn mja wvu- gress club, in an expense account tiled in the state elections bureau Friday. ! Harris ; Ellsworth, ' Roseburg, tor representative in congress, 4th cHstrict. spent $1,126. :i E. C, Sammons, Portland, re ported contributions of $2,475 in support of various candidates and treasures. Among other expense accounts tiled Friday: Support of U. S. Sen. Wayne J-lorse, $185.88. "! i Sidney B. Lewis, Salem, In sup- eirt of U. S. Rep. Walter Nor ad, 1st district, $100. " 1; Andrew Koerner, Portland, vet erans' contribution to Gov. Doug las McKay. $300. f- C. R. Hallberg, Rainier, in sup- ert of U. S. Representative Wal ' Nerblad and legislative reap portionment, $275. . .. oianej- acmesinger, cnairman JJarioa County Young Republican Club, in support of various re publican candidates, $125.13. jP. W. Hale, treasurer Marion County Democratic Central com- :4i mmnm no Henry Smith. Constable at Stay ton. Dies SUteimsa News Serrics STAYTON, Nov. 17 Henry Smith, 75, Stayton constable since 1907, died at his home here Friday following a long illness. Funeral services will be held in Wed die's Funeral chapel in Stay ton Sunday at 2 pjn, the Rev. Clyde R. Freeman, pastor of the Stayton Church of Christ offi ciating. Interment will be in the Lone Oak cemetery. smitn was born near Sublimity Jan. 7, 1866, and lived in this area his entire life. Besides be ing constable. Smith had served as Stayton fire chief, Marion county road supervisor and deputy sheriff. Surviving are his widow. Mrs. Hattie Smith of Stayton: four sons, Lester, Stayton; North, Eu gene; William. Portland, and Worth Smith, Salem; three broth ers, Alva, Estacada, John. Aums- ville, and Walter, New York, four grandsons and two granddaugh ters. , The family requests that friends contribute to the Santiam hos pital fund rather than send flow ers, s. Contributions may be left at tne mortuary-. Lletz, transportation. Standing, from left, are Fred Birch, housing; Robert Statxman, decorations; Russell Beotler, provost; Dr. M. E. Gadwa, reristrstion: Alfred W. Loncks, host; Robert F. White, park ing; Rollin Lewis, degree team; William Brauv, stage; Richard Meyer, host; Rayjlinton, banquet. A.'Foglesong, VUG Employe, in Arthur William Foglesong, 51, chief of the rate and tariff section of the public utilities commission, died Friday morning at a local Hospital. Born April 2, 1899, In Pawnee, OkUu, Foglesong worked for sev- v era! years with the Atchison, To peka and Santa Fe railroad in the southwest. He came to Oregon In 1920 and lived for about 12 ream In Oregon City before moving to oaiem. -... i oglesong was a member of Aiuitnoman Blue lodge ,L-AT it AM, in Portland. Survivors include his widow. Leda, in Salem; his father, Char les w. jrogusong, Jennings Lodge: four sisters. Mrs. Sylvia Burgess end Mrs. Qoldie Castor, both of Jennings Lodre; Mrs. Opal Mc- Chie, Carlton, and Mrs. Ruba Swi rart, Molalla; and two brothers. uus o. Foglesong, Molalla, and Cleo C Foglesong, Albany. Funeral services will be held t 1:23 xun. Mondar from the Clough-Barrick chapel. Interment sria be xa Belcrest Memorial park. Communist Trap Fails; Troops Gain (Story also on page 1) SEOUL, Saturday, Nov. 1MVV The UJS. 7th division swept for ward unapposed on the Korean fighting front today after two bat talions of communist troops tried to trap the column in a narrow gorge south of Kapsan. The Americans killed 128 of the machmegunning Reds' in a three hour battle and seat the rest flee ing. Whether the Reds were Chinese or Koreans was not clear. The Americans suffered some dead and wounded. Col. Harbert B. Powell, com' mander of the 17th regiment, which made the advance, told As sociated Press Correspondent Tom Stone he expected to reach the Manchurian frontier in "three or four days." i American fighter and bomber pilots said Kapsan, the doughboys' immediate objective, was gutted and still burning from two days of air attacks. On the extreme northeast front, the South Korean Capital division moved . ahead two and one-half miles to about five miles north of Myongchon. The division had been stalled for two days by heavy Red counterattacks that threaten ed its flanks. . American marines probed moun tains around the Chan gj in reser voir in north-central Korea. They reported they killed 75 Chinese communists in a: clash Thursday in tne mountains to the west. Army authorities in Washing ton said the total of Chinese Reds in all North Korea was 60,000. They said the troops were oper ating under . a headquarters in Korea. Morey Expecting v a a JXew Assignment Indications that he will be leaving Salem soon came Friday to Comdr. David N. Morey, jr inspector-instructor of Salem naval-marine reserve armory. But he doesn't know when or where he wiU be assigned. Orders were received calling up Lt Comdr. George Thomas Bunn of San Francisco to active duty and assigning him to the Salem armory. He probably will arrive about mid-December. Morey hadn't received his orders. He has been here nearly 2Vt years, fol lowing two years of similar duty in Portland. ing on trees will produce spores next spring and those on or in the ground also can produce spores which spread diseases of the stone fruits. Do not add debris from fruit trees that have any disease what soever to the compost piles. This material should be destroyed. Prevention by clean-up, accord ing to Hansen, is the best cure for the home gardener's plant disease problem. : Polk Farmers Warned to Check Slugs, Clean Orchards, Gardens Br TJOle L. Madsea Farm Editor, The Statesman DALLAS, Nov. 17 Two .warnings were issued by N. John Han sen, Polk county agent here today. First of these is that baiting should be done for slugs. Second, concerns we cleaning up ol orchards. Slug Infestations are heavy this fall in pea and vetch fields as well as in young clover fields, Hansen states. Rain has prevented pro per baiting and the damp weather lends itself to the work of slugs.1 They work much more rapidly in wet weather than In either cold! dry or warm dry periods, Hansen states. i Hansen suggested today that every grower put out check areas in their fields to find out if slugs are there. Slug baits containing metaldehyde and calcium arsenate are the recommended ones and these are available at almost all insecticide dealers, he added. Four pounds of the pellets to the acre will give eood control of slugs. If baiting Is followed by additional heavy rains, it may be necessary to rebalt at the end of a 10-day period. Baiting in the fields around fence rows and brushy areas may prevent slugs from spreading to the fields. To test bait put out half a dozen pellets, mark the spot with a stake, and examine in 24 hours. If so many as three dead slugs are found, it will pay to bait that section of the field, Hansen stated. Ia reference to orchards, Han sen said that home gardeners can prevent many of the diseases ap pearing in fruits, vegetables and other plants by general clean-up in the falL Apple leaves should be gathered and burned as the apple scab Uvea over the winter in diseased leaves and fruits. If these leaves and fruits are used as mulching material, the spores wfll be liberated next spring and wiU increase the infestation of apple scab. The mummies of stone fruits should be gathered and burned, too Hansen adds. Those remain- How Open PIONEER CLUB CAFE 858 Stat SL E2EAJTAST LUNCH DINNER Open $M turn, vnttl ? ' Frank and Lais Gould Concert Goers Given Tickets for Parking Twenty motorists drew parking tickets Thursday night for parking in restricted zones near Salem high school while they attended a con cert They were parked along portions of 14th and D streets that are re stricted, police said, because the streets are narrow and must be kept open to permit emergency vehicles to drive through if neces sary. The Navajo Indians - sun use moist earth as mortar for their eight-sided log homes. Called "ho- gans," these always face the east. DAIICE TOIUTE Wonder Valley Boys Playing t Your Favorite Western Songs and Old Time Dances. Coma and Let Us Play Your Person al Request vTOIIall Snack Bar Pecan Hoar Hood & Church Streets auditorium followed by a carnival and dance in the gym. E. Donald Jessop, band director, was chair man for the affair. A featured number in the musi cal portion of the festival was the singing of the Korean national an them by Soonchol Lee, a native Korean attending Salem high. Paul Ward kept the hour and a half program moving as master of ceremonies. Numbers played by the band included "American National Airs," the festival finale and back, ground music for several skits by Snikpoh dramatic club. The school modern dance group gave an In dian dance and Anita Tonning and Marian Powers did the "Glow Worm" ballet Vocal numbers sung by the choir were "For the Blessings oz uur Day and "This is My Country.' The girls glee club provided back' ground music for Snikpoh skits portraying modern and old-fash ioned Thanksgiving. Adding a touch of humor was a poem, "bunney views ox tne Statue of Liberty,w given by Part May and a monologue. "Lady at the Movies' by Cloyse Clayton. Musical solos were played ' by Marilyn Thor, a violinist and Glenn Benler, a trombonist The musical part of the program was concluded with a finale played by the band and orchestra and sung by the chorus. The carnival following the mu deal program featured cake walks, dancing to the music of the Salem high dance band, door prizes and a fishpond. Phone Rates Bid Hearing Set Nov.' 28 - Hearing on the application of the Pacific Telephone Sc Tele graph company for a rate increase of approximately 8 per cent will open in Salem November 28. Pub lic Utilities Commissioner George H. Flagg announced Friday. The application, which would add approximately $2,920,000 year to the company s revenues, was filed last May. If the in crease is approved lt would be the third in three years. An annual increase of Sl,560, 000 was granted by the utilities commission three years ago. In 1949 the company received an other $3,563,892 boost Increases for the three years would aggre gate 27 per cent Flagg said. Flagg said the hearing probably would last several weeks with company officials from many sec tions of the United States called to testify. It is probable that the city of Portland and several other Oregon municipalities will inter vene in the proceedings on the side of the public utilities com mission. Funeral Services Held Friday for R. A. Co an PORTLAND, Nov. 17-;P)-Fun- eral services "were held today for Ralph A. Coan, 69, president of the Oregon State Motor asso ciation, who died in a hospital here last night after a brief illness. Coan, an attorney with offices In Portland, was a director of the American Automobile association and a member of the advisory committee on travel information of the state highway commission and of the state retirement board. TAFT CAMPAIGN TOTALED COLUMBUS. O, Nov. 17 -WV U. S. Sen. Robert A. Taft (R-Ohio) and organizations supporting his re-election in the Nov. 7 balloting here reported expenses totaling S315.060. Continuous Shows Every Saturday and Sunday Attend the Bargain Matinee Today till 5 P. M, 7T Starts Today! fr;, M-G-M'i ""Vf ) thrill-a-minute ' ; y HS?1 i - -2 romance of a t - 'X- i 5 daredevil and 1 ' y- , 7? ... "' 'v , If) V. )sdL ? -.r U I 2-7S23 Last Times Tonight! Tl Open at C:45 P. M. Starts at 7:15 P. M. ; Doris Day i Gordon MaeEae ' . Eve Arden In Color TEA FOR TWO . . . MaeDonald Carey Gall Kusseir THE LAWLESS" f. - v. i in LI with I I Extra! ! , J Color Cartoon Adolphe Menjou r 1 "His Bitter Half I Will Geer . ' . ' . . I Lee Kebman's Band , and Chltwood's Bell Drivers Warner News Mat Daily From 1 p. m. . - Newl Thrillsl Remaneel . i itmue nam Cartoon O Fox News Cent, from 1 P. M. Last Times Today! - e- Laurence Olivier Tonorrow! Marlene Dietrich . George Baft "McmpoweiJ" : Fan ' ' Co-Hit! r A 7 Joe E. Drovra i 'Polo Joe" 1 11 Realtors Name Walter Musgrave Walter Musgrave, Salem real tor, was nominated to head the Salem Board of Realtors in 1951, according to a report made at the board i meeting Friday noon. The election is scheduled for December 8. Others nominated in clude Harold McMillan, vice pres ident: John Black, secretary; Co- burn Grabenhorst, treasurer; Jos eph W. Hutchison, member of the appraisal board, and Calvin Kent, director. The board will not meet next Friday, because of the Thanks giving holidays. . ' Hollywood Kids Matinee Today 1:00 to 4:00 F. M. S Cartoons Serial Special Matinee Feature "Hustlers la Devil's Canyon' i With Bed Ryder Little Beaver : Also Benson's Birthday Cake for Catherine Pearl, Gloria Dun can, Carol Flicker, Bobby Hunt, Alton Watson, Larry Zeeb, Charles Field, Bruce Bleckert, Jimmy FoelkL Rhett Partie, Dennis Olson, Eddie Ebensizer, Larry Wacken, Jane Slimak, Terry Hanson, Linda Barker, Linda Bleckert, Lynden Lap pen, Eddie Dougherty Terry Rund, Wayne Porter, David Nielsen, Eleanor SudtelL Eve. Show Cent. After 50 ' Ends Today! V wSViLK: if.. Plus TJnder My RIOT From Skln" Starts Tomorrow Cent. 1:15 SAi.UEL GOLDVnfK Second Feature "Armored Car Bobbery' J- f t i i 4 J J. 4 ' l if I - 'LATINS1' from CBS-ABC" Mamben of tht fam ous Hormel all - girl chorus, photographed during their network broadcast, show they 've really gone "South of the Border" for those ' authentic na tive instruments ustd in their popular Latin' specialty numbers. All-Girl (60 OP THEM) a ritm Ft- m rmJ 2 Full Hours bf Singing v . . Dancing . . Com Including ... Novelty Acts; coast-to-coast broadcast of cay i iclSGiiiii 7:30 TONIGHT I Seats $1.20 and $1.80, Incl. Tax V Bvy tickets today from an Uena dub member or downtown bank lobby t . or tonight from the box office. "A NIGHT OF FUN FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY" i r