REVIVALS LISTED Articles of incorporation for A. A. Allen Revivals, Inc., Brooks, was filed with the Marion county clerk Friday by A. A. Allen, pres ident and trustee; Gordon Kamp fer, vice president and trustee, and Lexie E. Allen, secretary-treasurer, all Brooks. Object of the corpora tion is "teaching and . practicing divine healing as taught in the Bible." , , Close out Sale starting Monday, June 11th of all merchandise in variety store at 2088 N. Commer cial. Entire stock to be sold at 80 discount. Hurry, sale will last only 3 days." - - ELECTRONICS MEN SOUGHT Request for electronics techni cians to work with the civil aeron autics administration in northwes tern states was issued Friday in Salem. Men interested were asked to call or visit the CAA office here, at the. base of the airport control tower. . Landscaping and designing. No job too large or too small. F-A. Doerfler. and Sons Nursery, 250 Lancaster Dr. at 4 Corners. Phone 2-2549. . NAVY COMES UNGUNNED The navy moved a gun from its air facility to the nearby Salem Gun club Saturday or it tried to. But the gun fell off a pickup en route and the navy is ungunned. It's looking for a 12-gauge Rem ington automatic shotgun. Painting all types-. Spray or brush. Schools, farm bldgs, resi dential Sc commercial. All work guaranteed. W. J. Collette - Paint ing Contractor. Phone 23511. "It's Quality You Get When You Call Collette." Free estimate. SCHOOL CLASS MEETS Salem senior high school class of 1911 will hold a reunion at the Marion hotel Thursday. Husbands and wives of classmates are invit ed. Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Fry will ahow pictures of a recent trip to Africa and Europe. Unclaimed watch sale. All watch es sacrificed for repair charges. Leaving Salem, June 11th. Salem Watch Shop, 2381 State. CHEMAWA STOKE CHANGES An assumed business name for Chemawa store at Chemawa was filed with the Marion county clerk Friday by Martin and Nell M, Knittel, both of Chemawa. A no ne oi retirement jiuiii uie suite was filed by R. G. Henderson. Super rummage sale. 2381 State, Friday and Saturday, 9r Johns-Manville snlngles applied by Matffls Bros, 164 S. Com'L Free estimates. Ph. 3-4642. APPROVE BOND SALE Salem public school officials Friday reported that Sale of $1, 000.000 worth of school bonds has been approved by the Western investment Banking Credit Re straint committee. Bids will be opened at Tuesday night's school board meeting. Italian spaghetti dinner at St Vin cent de Paul. Sunday 11:30-3. $1. Public invited. Grace's all outstanding costume jewelry, hand hags, real silk scarves, and. smart belts, at cost. Grace's, 234 N. High. KERGIL HOSPITALIZED Peter Kergil, Salem route 8, has entered -Salem Memorial hos pital for major surgery, relatives reported Friday. Income Tax Probers Study Property Sales Representatives of the federal income tax department are at the office of Marion County Recorder Herman Lanke this week checking over local property ' sales for the past year. The larger sales are noted and later the income tax returns of the persons making the sale are check ed to determine if the proper tax was paid. Births GRETNER To Mr. and Mrs. Jack Greiner, 1582 Court sU, a son Friday, June 8, at Salem General hospital. Welcome Monday for Engineer: Hatchery Dedication Tuesday A score of state and city offi cials and members of the Cham ber of Commerce will meet at the Senator hotel at 6:30 p. m. Monday to welcome CoL T. H. Lipscomb, new district chief of. the U. S. army engineers with , headquar ter in Portland. Colonel Lipscomb , succeeded CoL Donald Burns. The session Monday will be on the eve of a tour of the Detroit Sam and the dedication of the larion Forks fish hatchery. Cars . from many parts of the Willamette valley will converge tt Detroit dam at 9:30 ajn. Tues cay to form a caravan for the tour under the sponsorship of the ATTEIITIOII ' : M LOGGERS AND FARMERS f j LOGS UAIITED 1 1 ! S-FL 16-FL And Long Lengths ill - At Top Prices ' j ; I Dnrlilsnd LmnLtir Coi rics 1123 : . Turner, Oregon RETURNS TO SALEM - l Mrs. Bertha K. Weatherf ord, who has been in San Francisco lor 15 months since the death of her husband, Russel . K. I Weatherf ordH has returned to Salem and pur chased the King home at 2430 N. Church st. Temporarily she is res iding with her son-in-law ' and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. .Charles R. Knapp, recuperating from a frac tured knee. - f i - - i ' : Air - Steamship tickets ; anywhere. Kugel, 3-7694. 153 N. High St Marion Club Fa Plans to expand greatly "the cocktail lounge at the Marion ho tel this summer were announced Friday by G. Clerico, manager. The bar' and lounge .will be moved from present quarters of the first floor to an enlarged site in the basement of the hotel. The new space oi 30 by 40 feet will more than double - the present space, Clenco said. I ; ., I "New quarters for the lounge will be completely redecorated," said Clerico. "In addition to the bar there will be tables and if the demand Is great enough an area for dancing will be provided." . Clerico hopes to have the new facility completed by September 1 "for the state fair." 5 Its loca tion will be directly under the first floor lobby on the northwest cor ner of the hotel. Entrance will be gained through the main street floor doors. Work on the new quarters is to start within several weeks. ! i The room which houses the present lounge will be converted into a formal dining room, said Clerico. i I The exterior of the historic ho tel is receiving a new coat of grey green paint. A second coat Will be applied and Clerico says the job will be completed in about three weeks. Civil Service Accounting 1 Posts Open j Examinations for top-level ac counting 3obs with theistate gov ernment were announced by the state civil service commission this week. Deadline for applications was set at June 16. j Starting monthly salaries listed include accountant II, f $309; ac counts executive I, $364; accounts executive II, $442, and accounts executive III, $513. I Further information and ; appli cation forms may be obtained at the local employment office . on Ferry street or at the "state civil service commission, 102 -Public Service building, the announce ment said. I e Given Extra Year in State Prison Everett Stalnaker, state! prison inmate, pleaded guilty; in Marion county circuit court Friday to a charge of escaping from the prison several months ago, and was sen tenced to an additional year. Also appearing before. Judge George Duncan Friday was Don Bosteader, charged with obtaining money by false pretenses. He had been convicted of the charge and paroled. His parole was revoked Friday and he was sentenced to a maximum of one year in prison Frank Manning, charged with obtaining money by false preten ses, involving a bad check passed February 3, was sentenced to a maximum of three years in prison. Abe Smith, Salem, pleaded in nocent to a charge of rape, and trial was set for June; 14. He is held in Marion county Jail in lieu of $3,500 bail. : : Willamette Basin Project commit tee. Talks at the dam will be given by CoL C. C. Davis.; in-, charge of the dam for the engineers, and Russell Hoffman, resident engi neer for Consolidated! Builders, Inc., dam contractors. I f At the Marion Forks fish hatch ery, after a noon basket j lunch, Colonel Lipscomb will turh over the hatchery to the state fish com mission. John C Veatch fish com mission chairman, will accept the facilities. ; f. . En route home the caravan will visit the Stayton cannery aad the Bill Towery ranch. ? An informal no-host dinner will follow at the Marion hotel at 6:30 p. m. i i t - Hotel Plans Larger cility i I i Escape Bennett Home ' I From Korean Zone Duties Lt. (jg) - Frank Bennett, who served as a navy doctor in the Korean . area since last August, arrived in Salem this week for a rest en route to his new assign ment, at Puget Sound naval hos pital, Bremerton, Wash. Bennett here joined his wife, Helen, a three-month-old-son, Stephan'whom he had never seen, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Bennett. 855 E st He will be here for 30 days. ' The physician said the speed of adequate medical treatment for casualties had increased greatly since the early days of the Ko rean fighting. At first,' lack of sof- ficient field or base facilities pre vented immediate care and wounds had time to worsen before being treated. Later the army's field hospitals speeded care. . Assigned to the Fifth surgical team, Bennett was aboard the USS Consolation, first U. ' S. hospital ship to arrive in Korean waters. Occasionally it went to Japan with patients returning to base hospitals. ! . The ship's last duty before re turning to the states this week was in the Inchon area, where most of the patients were Korean civil ians and orphans of the war. Un til then the casualties had been a cross-section of the United Na tions in the battle. Sewer Lines Bids Under City Estimate Stateside Construction company of Roseburg was apparent -low bidder Friday on construction of approximately 22,000 feet of lat eral sewers in the Capitola-East Moreland area of north Salem. The firm submitted an alter nate low bid of $85,788.65, nearly $35,000 below engineer's esti-i mates for the project. A bid $43 higher was offered by the com pany substituting precast man holes for poured concrete man holes. i Second low bid of eight sub mitted was by Pat Barclay, Myrtle Creek, for $87,255.90. Others rang ed to $135,230.40 by the Empire Construction Co. of Portland. The bids were taken under ad visement by the city engineer's office. City Engineer J. Harold Davis, who openeti the bids in the absence of City Manager J. L. Franzen, said contract for the pro ject probably would be awarded by the city council at its Monday night meeting. Public Records PROBATE COURT , - Charles E. Schubert estate: Ap praised at $4,478. John C. Doyle estate: Order set ties-estate. Louise A. Rehfuss estate: Order confirms sale of real property. Mary Edith Johnson estate Estate closed. CIRCUIT COURT Eula Leah Campbell vs. Arthur L. Campbell: Decree of divorce restores plaintiff's former name of Eula Leah Lamm. : Myrtle F. Steinke vs.. Charles H. Steinke: Decree of divorce awards plaintiff custody of a minor child during " summer vacation months, plus $50 per month support mon ey. ! Vernon H. Beshore vs. Esther L. Beshore: Decree of divorce awards custody of two minor chil dren to plaintiff. Lawrence Jessie Stewart vs Barbara E. Stewart: Suit for div orce charging cruel and inhuman treatment. Married July 25, 1950, at Jefferson. Marian Jackson vs. Eugene Lawrence Jackson: Suit for div orce alleges defendant's incarcera tion and seeks custody of two min or children and $40 per month support money for each. Married at Lordsburg, N. M. MARRIAGE APPLICATIONS Virgil R. Punzel, 27, construc tion worker, route 2, box 222, and Jean H. Brown, 24, florist, 14454 Ferry st., both Salem. Lawrence M. Yates, jr., 21, truck driver, 1495 Lee st- and Nina C Bowman, 18, domestic route 3, box 861, both Salem. James E. Ernst, 25, mechanic, and Shirley smith, 23, nurse, both of St Paul. MUNICIPAL COURT James D. Buchanan, 2285 S. 12th st., charged with obtaining prop erty by false pretenses, held on $1,000 bail. Frederick Napolean Dandurand, Albany, charged with driving while intoxicated, trial date chang ed to June 21, posted $250 bail Irwin Geer, 1395 N. Cottage st, charged with committing an act tending to cause a child under 18 to become delinquent, fined $125, 20-day jail sentence ; suspended. placed on probation for one year. Befame MONO-AC NOIUTTONSlrawtlafv Discover how you. wo, mar near aeaia yet hide your deaf ness. Write, phon or com m. J3e!tone.Hearing Center James N. Taft tt Associates 2ZS Oregon Bldr. Cor. State A Hizh Phone 2-44S1 r i Deaf ness ... Father Son' Get Acquainted r I Three-moDth-old Stephan Bennett nets were almost complete strangers when they get together la Sa lem this week npon Lt Bennett's return from Korea. Mrs. Bennett Is at his right Bennett had not seen his ton since he went to the far east last August (Statesman photo.) - . j Strawberry Crop Estimated! At Only 65 of ! By Llllie ' Farm Editor, Anyway you look at it, strawberries are going to be short this year. Estimates of processors Friday in the Willamette valley area was for about a 65 per cent of normal crop. 1 William Linfoot of United Growers said Its pack of strawberries would run about 75 per. cent of last be due to a larger acreage and not Added Civil Defense Drill Said Needed Preliminary checks on . last Wednesday's state-wide air raid warning test show the necessity for more training in how to spread the alarm, Ivan B.- McKinney, head of the communications de partment of the' state civil defense agency, said Friday, i Purpose of the test, conducted entirely by telephone, was to check the speed and efficiency of alerting every city in Oregon of possible air raid. One alert was during regular business hours and the other during early evening hours. I "It was not surprising that weaknesses were revealed," said McKinney. "But that was what the test was for, and; it does not mean it was a failure." The exercise involved dissem inating alert calls from five key point warning centers to each county and thence to the cities. Complete evaluation of the test will be made as soon as "reports are received from the field, said McKinney. Suggestions for im provements will be tient to CD personnel at all levels. Similar tests will continue to be made un til Oregon's warning system Is perfected down to the community level, he said. j Stage Show Promises j Arouses Talk t The promise of stage shows in either the Elsinore or Capitol the atre aroused wide-spread interest in Salem this week end, and brought to mind the colorful pro ductions of the Franchot and Marco troupes of a score of years ago." i Word that stage shows were in the offing came from 'Albert For man, who with brother William, purchased the two Salem theatres from Warner Brothers. Acquisition of the two show houses leaves the Hollywood the atre, owned by Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hassenstab, as the only "inde pendent In Salem, j Member Federal Savings a Astern and bis father, Lt (Jg) Frank Ben- Normal Year L. Madsea ,. The Statesman year but the larger pack would to production. .j Ralph Seburn, manager at Birds Eye Snider at Wood burn 'recalled that last year's crop, too, was be low. normal but not so- far below as this year. Berries were just be ginning to come in from ; the hill sections Seburn stated, adding that quality is excellent this year. F. M. Smith of the Stayton Can ning comnany agreed as to the ex. cellent quality and thai the Fern Ridge and Coon Hollow berries were now reaching the cannery Processors agree that sun, but "not too hot sun" is needed. A few thought ' rain might help develop the latter berries, but the majority of processors along with Ithe SU verton Hills and Stayton area growers were not wishing for rain at jthte time. Too hot weather, all agreed would wind the season up in a hurry. j Picking in the hill sections Is expected to last to July!' 4th or shortly after. Most of the straw berry processing will wind up in tne iirst week of July, growersl stated. ' Despite the .apparent prospects for a short crop, there was no in clination on the part of processors Friday to raise the 17-cent grower price. This is 5 cents under last year's price with prices for pick ing remaining the same 4 Vi cents with Vi cent bonus at season's end. . Receipts of hill berries! will be small in local markets, wholesalers said Friday. A few stands through the countryside are offering ber ries but these are usually sold out early in the afternoon. One stand on the Silverton-Salem road adds a second picking in mid-afternoon to catch the home war dbound of fice workers. i Growers Interviewed Friday thought continued cold iweather would permit the berries' on the vines to grow larger and give more weight " I Champoeg Route Improvements j Asked of Countv A request to Marion ! county court Friday that several roads leading to Champoeg state park be improved drew from the court the statement that the roads are state owned and the couny has no funds for such work ( The Arbor Grove Farmers un ion wrote to the court asking that the roads be widened and straight ened. The letter stressed the grow ing tourist interest in the park. The major food of blue 'and fin whales is "plankton," a j micro scopic seawater organism.: SAVINGS EARN i OtlE ! ' ; - at Salem Federal January 1st cncT July 1st, savers are paid liberal divi dends t . . increasing your funds. Our current 2)4 re turn encourages thrift. 560 Stat Street i Facing Court House ;: SALEM, OREGON I , Loan Insurance Carpe-ratlon Freight Rate . BoostsHii::. By Governor Continued percentage ' freight rate increases,-plus federal trans portation ' taxes, "are ; striking , a serious blow at our western econ omy,' Gov. Douglas McKay wrote Friday In 'an appeal to other top officials to fight proposed in creases.''. ' : ' i . .. j - The governor wrote to Gover nors Langlie of Washington and Warren of California, as well as to Oregon's congressional delega tion. "Due to the disadvantage in herent in being located at such a great distance-from the consum ing centers, our commodities have always had to enter these markets handicapped by a substantial ex cess in freight eharges. For many years there was little change in these differentials, but with the large increases, made entirely on a percentage basis, of the past few years, this spread has been tre mendous. . ... The governor said that in 1946. it cost $315.80 more to send a car load of canned goods from Port land to New York than It did from Oconomowoc, Wis, a competing point . j Now, he said, the differential has increased, to $611.82, and the proposed rate boosts would In crease the difference to $703.59. Taxes on transportation and communications p e n a I i z e the west," he continued. Since all such taxes are on a percentage basis, the long haul bears an un fair part of the burden.' . The proposed freight raise would be 15 per cent j 12 Reservists Leave for tit m mvv irainin Twelve naval reservists from this area left Friday night for San Diego, Calif., and a two-weeks training course at the naval train ing station there. . ! The men are Dale Boyd, Rob ert B. Eiswerth, Chester B. Evan- off, Robert E. Loveland, Harold G. Pack and Thad E. Stevens, all of Salem; Ross P. Daniel, Cloverdale; Earl A. Gregg, Monmouth; Mayo M. Holhn, Brooks; Wesley T. Loveall, Hebo;. Ronald D. Meier, Sublimity, and SpencerA. Webb, Beaver.. All are recruit seamen with the exception of Evanoff, who is an apprentice fireman, and who is in charge of the group. 1 Salem reserve officers also urg ed reservists to register soon for one of three future two-week sea cruises aboard the destroyer escorts, USS Brannon and USS Rombach, leaving Seattle, Wash. The cruises will be July 22 August 4, with liberty port at Prince Rupert, B. C; August 12-25 with liberty at Portland,' and Aug ust 26-September 8, with liberty at Vancouver, B. C. j Bent An -Free Instruction on Band and Orchestra s , Instruments. " . RENT. . . AND BE SURE . i BEFORE YOU BUY --( All rent may apply on purchase price. Victor Palmason, director of the summer class, will be in our store for consultation TODAY I WILLS MUSIC STORE Complete Mnsie Store for 7t Years 432 Itate Street ! . Phone J-4951 KILL VJEEDS nnsv twiih ocross your tuckhorn and efner ore dejfroyed w fo thm Brassy tv:.V WEED A FEED -fOCills rhe WdsWd n simultaneous action Jeedi the, grass to thicker growth and Vicher': color. ft best opplied with Scoff Spreader. - lox weeds & feeds 2500 . tog. IIJDOO h hrz vf Easy control to -broad-leaved weeds. Same potent element cj-Wc reed but w'rthovt Jown opplied os It comes from, the package' . no mixing or fussing with water. ? - Bon. 2500 sq ft - SMS - Bog. IIJDOO tq ft - MS low PfOAI KSKa Kim ef lf DOERFLER & SONS nuxsuy and oA&cm nou '!'" Opea 8udays KB N. Lancaster at 4 Tne CZrfagBgau Saiga, Creysa. Cotardar, J;rs .-lS5I-5 f&ZZj-'' ?-r.-r.T" OF MANY N AT I 0 N S Claire Heea (center), ef Irlsh-Ilawaliaa-Chinese descent Walks with rvnners-ap, Gloria Kane mora (right), of Japanese-English -German-Scotch blood, and Joaa Scott. English-Irish-Freach, after : winning . "Miss Hawaii" title. Many New Faces Among City j! .Recreation Staff Members 'r .1- - ' - j- . . ' j , : Staff for the Salem playground program that will open Monday for the city's summer recreation was announced Friday by Supervisor Vernon Gilmore. - ' I' j !j , Neighborhood playgrounds will open at 1 p.m. Monday and after that will operate from 9 ajn. to noon Friday. Leslie and dinger swimming pools will open at 1 p.m. Monday and after that be available from 10 ajn. to 9 p.m. weekdays and 1 to 9 p.m. Sundays. "We want to get off to a good start" even though, this is the earliest the playgrounds have ever opened after school's close, said Gilmore. All but one of the life guard staff are new" to the sys tem, and about orie-half the other recreation leaders are new. Area directors are Harold Hauk at Olinger, Robert Metzger at Les lie, Richard Mase at. West Salem and John Lewis at Bush's Pasture park. Leaders of special activities include Henry Girand for boys at Leslie; Del Ramsdell for tennis at Richmond, Englewood, Leslie and Olinger; Victor Palmason for mu sic ; at Leslie, Olinger and West Salem. Playgrounds, mostly at schools, will be in charge of Mrs. Margar et Waite, Highland; Mrs. Lucille Humphrey, Englewood; Mrs. R. D. Affolter, West Salem (park); Je anne Hoffman, Olinger; Mrs. No- ra Simpson, Leslie (grove instead of McKinley school); Mrs." Irma Wells, Bush park (southwest cor ner); Mrs. Frances-Hall, 22nd and Lee streets (in lieu of Richmond); Mrs. Helen McLeod, Grant. The lifeguards are Lee Gustaf sort assisted by Margaret Stein brugge at Olinger, and David Put nam assisted by Ann Carson alter nating with Marian Carson at Les lie.' Maintenance and checkroomH Instrument 1717: own uondeliont riant qm, pejlyTbTood-ZeoYW Wed tkbvi? harm -'or distgloratiom Aw q ft 12.95 rYl WS Vt food. ' Drv fecrh iW te f!8 b bft We b -YJ2 -. M Art SA.IS r 1 and 1 to 4 pan. Monday through staffs add the staff. another 11 persons to 1 1 THE REGULAR ANNUAL MEETING of the members of the Best Memorial As sociation will be held in the adrriirusu-ative build ing at Belcrest Memorial Park on Monday, June 11, 1951 ot 2 p. m; Ownership of one or more full sections in .the park constitutes mem bership in the associa tion. " Purpose of the meeting is to elect a trustee to serve from June II, ! 1951 to the date of the annual meeting 1954 and . to transact such other business as may proper ly come before the meet- ' ing. 1 ' -W. E. SCANDUNG, Secretary,. Belcrest Memorial Association WSSh - It ' i if SVN VALLEY BRZAO die aae war to "Raducinf Starvatiofl yW mm eat aad enjoy SUN YALLXY f BREAD ... low k etloriet yot h$k f la nrsy producinf protein. I SUN yALLEY ADOS YAJUXTY I k "ems' Luufry mu." : . , If towaoLcsss by th Eiktrs of AUster tread aW w m f wriKOUi x N I SM0IUM1NS ei I . '