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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1951)
m 4 a - - fl t if g - M i I Oily News HBirieffs COMMISSION SLATES EXAMS Civil service commission exam inations for positions of deckhand, dragtender, motorboat operator, fireman-watertender, quartermas ter and wiper, with employment on the Portland engineer district floating plant were announced Tuesday. Information on the ex aminations are available from Wil liam Schaefer at the Salem post office. MOTORIST CITED A Portland road accident Tues day noon resulted in a municipal court citation for Fred Martin Pacleb, Salem route 7, box 234E, according to city police. Officers said he was charged with follow ing too close behind an auto op erated by Ethel Gladys Satter, route 6.'No injuries were reported. Grain fed, beef, hind quarters for your locker. Orwigs Market, 3975 Silverton Rd. Phone 2-6128. MUMPS CASES DECLINE Mumps remained atop the Mar Ion county communicable disease list last week, but the number of new cases had declined to 15, ac cording to the county health de partment. Other new cases re ported included influenza 10, chie kenpox 9, broncho pneumonia 8, impetigo 4, ringworm 3, measles 2, scabies andtyphoid 1 each. GATES TAVERN CHANGES Change of ownership of Chuck's tavern at Gates, from J. P. Schim berg to Oliver M. and Delia M. Willis of Gates,, was shown Tues day in assumed business name filings with Marion county clerk. Roof repairing and new roof es timated. Willamette Valley Rocf Co. ' CITATION FORMS READY Applications for the Philippine presidential unit citation for mem bers of the army are availablbe at Salem organized reserve head quarters. Eligibility for the resent Jy announced award requires ser vice in the islands between Dec. 7, 1941, and May 10, 1942, or be tween Oct. 17, 1944, and July 4, 1945. YOUTH MEETINGS BEGIN A series of meetings for teen age youth which began Tuesday night at Salvation Army hall, 241 State st., will continue at 7 o'clock each night through Sunday. The programs include singing and les sons presented through films, pup pets and other media. Delegations are to attend from Portland, Eu gene and Coos Bay corps. RETIRES FROM COTTAGES Notice of retirement from the assumed business name of Mc Coy's cottages at Salem route 4, box 279, was filed Tuesday with Marion county clerk by- Arthur J. McCoy. PHOTOGRAPHER FILES Picture Craft, studios is the-assumed business name filed Tues day with Marion county clerk by E. V. McGuire, Salem route 3, box 602- Cross's Coffee Cup. Open nights Wednesdays through Sundays. FEED FIRM LISTED Assumed business name of North Marion Distributing company, a feed business at Aurora route 2, was filed Tuesday with Marion county clerk by Paul Gooding. Cross's Coffee Cup-. Open nights Wednesdays through Sundays. SILVERTON FIRM NAMED Dolores Syron, 1205 S. Water St., Silverton, filed the assumed business name of I and M grocery Tuesday wit Marion county clerk. Knight Memorial church rummage sale Thursday, Feb. 22, 9-4 over Greenbaums. AT HOLLYWOOD LIONS - Mrs. James Sidney Stiers, for merly Pak-Bok Ye of Seoul, Ko rea, will" speak at the Wednesday noon luncheon of Hollywood Lions club in the Lion's den. Living in Salem now, she is the wife of an American soldier on duty in Japan. Births NICHOLS To Mr. and Mrs. John D. Nichols, 1015 Terrace dr., a daughter, Tuesday, Febru ary 20, at Salem General hospital. THAYER To Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Thayer, Lyons, a daughter, Tuesday, February 20, at Salem Memorial hospital. SMITH To Mr. and Mrs. Wal ter Smith, Stayton, a daughter, Tuesday, February 20, at Salem Memorial hospital. SCOUT PAPER WEIGHED Salem Boy Scouts I collected slightly more than! 50! tons, about Vi freight car ladjs, of waste paper in, their drive Sunday. This was a little more than jone-half the total collected in thej-laist general drive three year4 ago! Howard Higby, area field executive, said another city-widef pickup would be made in late April.' Proceeds go to the building (fund for Camp Pioneer. i There will be a registered Spencer Corsitiere at Hotel Senator Fri day, Feb. 23, free jfigure analysis. Orders taken now! fop pre-Easter delivery. For appt. l835. Joyce Rnsholt. I H r - t FAIRMOUNT HOME DUE Ralph Johnson pbtained a city building permit Tuesday to erect a one-story house at 1 625 John st. in Fairmoynt Park addition. Cost was listed as $18,000. Dr. Wolcott Buren was issued 4 permit to alter a dwelling at 1185 Ni' Church st-, at a cost of $1,200; j ; i I J NEW CITIZENS GUESTS Several recently naturalized American citizens will be guests of Salem Rotary cliib ' at today noon's luncheon inith Marion ho tel, arranged by Robert Sprague of the international ierviee com mittee. The program (twill include Claude Kells, YMCA citizenship class instructor, aitd Circuit Judge ueorge .Duncan. American telephone and telegraph Co. rights are now being traded. For assistance calf Conrad, Bruce and Co. 203 Oregon iBldg. Phone 3-4106. i f : RUG DYEING DEMONSTRATION Rug dyeing will! be 1 demonstrat ed this Friday at jlhe Lincoln dis trict home extension unit meet ing. The extension unit will meet at the Lincoln hojTie of Mrs. Eva Purvine at 10:3d ajn., starting with a sack lunch! Leaders of the project Will be Mrs.jjjP, L. Hicks and Mrs. Earl Johnson., CHURCH MEN CONVENE C. L. Marsters, f Dajllas city at torney, will speak oiji "Our Own Iron Curtain" at the Jason Lee Methodist church j Mesh's Brother hood dinner meeting tonight at 6:30 in the churchl 1 ! ROAD REPAIR SLATED Patching of Pring ordered Tuesday tty Marion coun ty court, following the road was in nfeed able repair. e road was reports that of consider- Johns-Manville shingles applied by Ma this Bros., 164 S. Com'l. Free estimates. Ph. 3-4642. i ! ' CARNEGIE MEET TONIGHT A dinner meeting of Dale Car negie club is set for ff o'clock to night at the Lion's i den. Guests will Ha i-rtAmHovo in 4k. T5Al i club, who will participate in con tests and speechesj. jj i OPTIMISTS PLAN FILM A joint meeting of ISalem Opti mist club and Opti-Mrs. will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Senator hotel. The program will include a navy film, "Commun ism." j ji : j i! ' Food sale, casserojesjicakes, cook ies, etc. MeadowlaHc Aux. of VFW. Elfstroms basement Thursday. f ! TOWNSEND MEET TONIGHT Townsend club 4 will meet to night at 8 o'clock at 2125 N, 4th st. i i Chap Party State Employes ten Plans March 2 First social gatherSnsr this vear for the members olj Agricultural chapter 26 of the Oregon State Employes association! will be held Friday night, Marclsj 2, at Four Corners community hall, accord ing to Al Fleming, chapter presi dent, j ; Lucille Holmes; hejads the com mittee for entettaihment which will follow a no-hos dinner. Mil dred Carpenter and per committee are arranging the! dinner. The clean - up committee, with Roy Shaw as chairman, includes all the division chiefs at the state department of agriculture, Frank McKennon of plant, !M E. Knick erbocker of animail and O. K. Beals of foods' and dairies I division, plus Charles Dallas, Dr. E. R. Derflin ger, Dean Patterson ' and Jack TurnbulL M The affair will include a busi ness session. j ( ; IPbuBdM Me cordis MUNICIPAL COURT . Shirlee Lively, 320 Sunset ave., charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor, pleaded guilty, continued to March 20 for sentencing. DISTRICT COURT Lyle W. Wood, Newberg, charg ed with driving while intoxicated, sentencedVto 60 days in county JaiL Fred Martin Pacleb, Salem route 7, Box 234E, charged with follow ing too close behind a motor ve hicle, cited. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS Aberheart Walter Werner, 19, laborer, route 7, box 308, and Joy Eloise Branson, 18. carhop, 2385 Broadway st-, both of Salem. PROBATE COURT John Wilson estate: Amended accounting approved and estate closed. ; . CIRCUIT COURT . Phyllis L. McDonald vs Jay H. McDonald: Custody & minor child during pendency I of j suit granted to Mrs. Vincent Moran. Dale W. Trudelvs Mildred Trude: Complaint fdr divorce al leging cruel ; and! inhuman treat ment seeks award of minor child's custody to defendant with plaintiff to pay $40 monthly support money. Married Feb. 2, 1948, at Minnea polis, Minn, s i ? 1 L Laura Roberta Stuart vs Gaither C Stuart: Divorce decree granted plaintiff;, defendant's cross -complaint disallowed J property settle ment agreement confirmed. Eileen A. Smith vs Sidney A. Smith: Divorce decree ' grants plaintiff custodyf of; minor child and $45 monthly support money, with defendant 'granted owner ship of auto, i j j j Ruby L. - Ycoy IvsjfGuillermo C Ycoy: Complaint forjdivorce alleg ing cruel and inhuman treatment seeks ownership of undivided one half interest in real, property and settlement of i personal property rights. Married July 8, 1946, at Stevenson, Wash; Hi Blah Farmers Urtwti 'Event in. M n l:h L: 1 y 2 If -M l f i 4 k LlAJLr- U i WOODBURN, Feb. 20 It was junior day at the Orexon State Farm ers Union here: today. Pictured are Mrs.' Dork Hunt, Boring, Clack amas county junior I leader, and Cleo Olson, Kelso, Ore., state junior reporter, talking over plans for the program held later in the eve ning. (Farm Photo for The Statesman.) Farmers Union Juniors Given ; 1 High Awards (Story also On page one.) WOODBURN, Feb. 0 Six Jun ior Farmers Union members were honored at a junior banquet to night at the three-day Oregon State Farmers Union convention which opened here today. Torchbearer's awards were pre sented to Evelyn Boge of Laurel Schools local; to Ronald and Clif ford Moeller Barton Kamna and Joyce Gnos ? of : Blooming local, both in Washington county, and to Robert Beutler of Central How ell in Marion county. Presentation was made by!H. J. Ralph, national vice president. The award, the highest that can be earned in the organization, represerits five years of completed work in the junior organization, i Gale Vanliaanen of Central Howell, was master cif ceremonies at the banquet. Featured was the pageant, "Peoples of the Earth," adapted and I directed) by Marjory Brewster, Marion county junior leader. Brooks Junior) acted the pageant. Difficult for Youth Jessie Ulnic, junior leader, In her report earlier in Ithe day, said it is difficult to interest youth in youth can t to the most reserves en- work because "the even look forward fundamental; opportujnity that to live," she said. Howefer, the youth program had, grown tjhis past year, she added. Ralph Beck, Oregon State col lege extension service, objected to corrective measures used against inflation as j "defeating the inde pendence of the American people." Everyone is hedging when it comes to inflation j he said- The urban dollar which is being invested in farm lands creates competition for young farmers just starting out. They should not, he went on, have to compete with: "free capital." Beck also; expressed hope that the present "upset' would not bring any j shipyards or other "huge war Industries" to Oregon. He hoped, instead, that "we would have an opportunity to settle down to meet the ne4ds of the half million people who came to Ore gon during the past war." Partic ularly, he hoped Qregon could catch up with the necessary schools lor the influx of popula tion. Opposes 'Briefing' Arthur Bone, editor of the Ore gon Farmers Union,! in his report, expressed bitter opposition to the Nothing Down Pay Monthly Drapes Made lo Order Drapery Materials SHADES I i DRAPE RODS ALUMINUM AWNINGS Columbia-Matte Frameless . Screens! BAMBOO SHADES We also wash, retape, paint and re-slat your old Venetian blinds ELMER, the Bund Man CaU Anytime For Free. Estimates Phone 3-1328 1425 Rare St. j West Salem We Give SAB Green Stamps so-called "briefing sessions" in which state and defense officials call in correspondents and radio commentators "to give them a few special facts which support the particular line of thinking it is be lieved desirable the people should follow." Few, he said, were the newspapers and radios whose re porters dug out their own facts. The outcome of these sessions, he added, had been too successful in directing the thought of the Amer ican people. He suggested as means of counteracting this pro vision for more top-level young sters to obtain college education. Now, he said, only 20 per cent of Oregon high school graduates go to college. On Wednesday the annual meet ing of the insurance delegates will be held. The annual Farmer Union banquet will be held Wednesday bight with Dr. A. L. Strand, presi dent of Oregon State college, as speaker. Also to speak during the day will be Vice President Rolph. More than 200 are expected at Wednesday's meeting, with the peak of the convention, some 300 members, expected on Thursday when the program for 1951 and election of officers will be held. Originally a brassard was a piece of defensive armor covering the upper arm. TOASTMASTERS MEET Glenn Hamilton will be acting toastmaster when the Capitol Toastmasters club meets Thursday at 6:15 p.. m. in the Gold Arrow restaurant. Slated speakers in clude Dewey Davis, Stearns Crush ing, Dr. Harry Moran, Maurice Crowe and Elmer Boyer. With this PIN j you can HEAR ! a pin drop! . . It's the new movable microphone of the new SONOTONE. and looks like a lovely Jwld brooch. No dangling out side cords! No muffling clothe-rub noUe. I ttt ft T0DAY1 Or WRITE K3tt I I I I cAMATAMf I SONOTONE W. F. Dodge Certified So no tone Consultant Will Be At SONOTONE HEARING CENTER Hotel Senator, Salem Thursday, February 22 I 9 A.M. to 7 PM. I Investigate the "Movable Ear I . Senetene's Newest - " Hearing Improvement I SONOTONE OF PORTLAND ENGLEWOOD PARENT-TEACHEtS ASSOCIATION WISHES TO EXPRESS THEIR APPRECIATION TO THE FOLLOWING FIRMS AND INDIVIDUALS WHO GAVE SO FREELY OF BOTH TIME AND MERCHANDISE TOWARD THE SUCCESS OF OUX ANNUAL I CARNIVAL Daryl Jones, Distr. Paul Armstrong - Priscilla Wiltsey The Pike Ice Cream Co. 'Mayflower ko Cream Co. Deluxe ice Cream Co. Max Svko Sears Roebuck j& Co. Orvafs! Used Cars Ladd and Bush: Bank Boring Optical j Co. . Ferguson Enterprises Reid, Murdock Co. l Ml'. HU't , "TheStateamcmu Scdem. Ore.. Wednesday, rehrnarr 21, 1S51 S , Reserve Yoiir Rem As little as i ... I geraitor mm Starts You ort the O o I n o CTM1 If YOU DO NOT HAVE A REFRIGERATOR OR IF YOU HAVE AN OLDER ONE THAT HAS GIVEN A GOOD LIFE OF SERVICE AND MJGHT EREAK DOWN AT ANY TIME OR IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO TRADE IN YOUR PRESENT ONE AND ENJOY THE ADVANTAGES THAT CAN ONLY eS FOUND IN FRIGIDA1RE, AMERICA'S NO. I REFRIGERATOR THEN COME IN TODAY AND SEE THE SPLENDID VALUES THAT CAN BE SET ASIDE FOR YOU-FOR AS LITTLE AS SS40-OR IFlYOU CANT COMS IN-PHONE NOW-AND ASK FOR ONE OF OUR pRIGIDAJRE SPEC1AU ISTS TO COME TO YOUR HOME AND EXPLAIN THE PLAN A Reserve Your Refrigerator HOW! Save for a FRIGID AIRE MADE POSSIBLE THROUGH THE CO-OPERATION OF THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK AND YOUR FRIGID AIRE DEALER After the Initial $5.00 De- After Down Pay- v w , You Deposit Weekly vVfisflT If You Want a The Down YUSlv,tou SV" , . . For 3 For 6 For 9 n Weekly Refrirerator Payment Is Months Months Months (Approx.) Model AM-60 49.75 3.75 lit i 1-20 Model SM-76 57.75 4.40 2.15 j 1.40 302 Model MM-78 59.75 4.60 2.20 I IAS ZM Model MM-74 64.75 5.00 2.50 1X0 3.41 Model MM-92 69.75 5.40 2.60 1.70 367 Model MM-110 77.75 6.10 2.90 j 1.90 " 4.07 Model DM-90 82.75 60 3.10 2.05 433 Model DM-107 92.75 7.30 3.55 zli " 4&S Model IM-80 104.75 80 4.00 ) 2.65 541 Model TM-100 117.75 IL40 440 sloO ' 6.17 TT After the Initial $5X0 deposit, and the soring of $4.60 a week for 3 months, this model MM78 wQl be delWered to your homo Down payments shown are in keepina with prices of this date. Purchase prices will be those prevailina- at time of delivery. Refrirerators will be set .aside for yen three months ahead of completion date of your savin fs plan. Every effort will be made to nave your selection ready at this time, but, of course, this cannot be guaranteed. RESERVE YOUR FRIGID AIRE NOW THROUGH THE CO-OPERATION .OF THE ; First National Banh of Portland, Salemi Branch and Hogg Bros i : wm mmt si j " ' 1 ; 1 Pick the new Frigidaire Food Freezer that fits your frozen food ttorage problem exactly -tnat keept iooas navor-iresa ' k months 1 There are three model from which to choose. ranging in capacity from 308 to 630 lbs. of frozen foods. 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Connaerckd Ctreei ftMK itm usm. t'JZ0kii5 P. Xi . Monday Thra Friiay Do You Etaeribcx