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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1951)
.4 IZThs ;hfirtnrrrt.Sclsn, Oxecjoa. IfaescIaT. Ae?st 2L IT HE MAUEVf NEWSiCOLUMNS v i ! From TKo Oregon Statesman's Valloy Correspondents. Gresham, Yamhill Events Sfart on 11951 Round of Fairs Oregon r By LClle L Madsca 1 ! Tina Editor. Tb SU1 run i . T Oregon cot off to its first round in: annual fairs last week,; with snmserous fairs slated from now until the state fair opens September 1. With Tillamook's fair over, and i Multnomah's opened Mon day at Gresham. the next three weeks promise a busy time for those who make the rounds. ; -.. - ' While a number of mid-Willamette! valley folk will attend! both Gresham fair and the Wash- VeinIx)liSpen Leave at Home ; lUUtaua News Service LIBERTY Now viii tint at the home of his parents, Mr. and". Mrs. John! Van Loh of Skyline roid, is John; Van Loh, Jr., home on s pre shipmect leave before he is sent to Japan. He has been stationed at Camp Roberta, Calif. His fiancee. Jane Engle of Bev erlyiHills, Calif,? flew to Salem and ts visiting here until Van Loh reports to Camp toneman.!Miss Engle is a senior it the University of California. t Van Loh will be accompanied to Camp Stoneman by his parents. Ington county fair (August 29 Ceptember 1), more interest will center around the mid-valley fairs. 1 First of these Is Yamhill coun ty's t McMinnville, August 21-23. This is devoted chiefly to 4-H and ITA exhibiU. ! Mrs. Paul Youngman of Mc- Mjrwviue win oe gcnci j iuki- tntendent of the Yamhill fair. The first-year clothing will be in char ge of Mrs. I. B. Harris of Sheridan, assisted by, Mrs. K. D. Fendall of Hew berg. Second year clothing will come under the supervision of Mrs. Guy Sully, McMinnville, Mrs. Orin Zimmerman, Dundee, will as sist Mrs. Alma Wells In handling the style reruee . Mn.-JKillle Tykeson, Newberg. Urs. Marge Johnson, Dayton and lira. Beulah Thayer, Yamhill, are la charge of ; art. Homemaking, cooking and canning come under Ira. wm Ayre, Dundee; Mrs. Rus sell Jones, Amity; Mrs. Carl Mon arch and Mrs. Fred Schaad, New berg; Esther Wilcox, Mrs. W. Mek fcers and Mrs. H. J. Pearson of UcMinnville; Mrs. Steve Benedict f Dayton, and Mrs. Harry Wilder ef Sheridan, r Grass Is Dairy Clerk ' Louis Gross will clerk the dairy . show and Marvel Smith, Amity, the fat stock. Stanley Ego, Day ton, will superintendent the poul try and W. Wayne Roberts, the - - livestock. . - The first evening of the Mc Minnville fair will be devoted to home economics and style revue. Tse second evening will Include a parade, champion contests, tractor, operating skills and a dance jamboree in which it is anticipated 1,000 costumed fol lowers1 of folk dancing will per . form. All the entertainment is free and open to the public, Including ; a machinery display. . Marion county boys and girls will hold their exhibit at the state fairgrounds from August 22 to 24 Inclusive. The complete program , has not been announced but will include displays similar to those planned, for Yamhill county. PIk Coonty's A us. 23-25 foiK county's i rair, wnicn nas both adult and ? Junior divisions, will open at Monmouth on August 23 and carry through the 23th. List of ludses for this fair in clude Walter Shelby, Albany, dairy; Len Forster, Tangent, swine, sheep and beef; Andy Fredrickson, Salem, rabbits; Kenneth Priest, Al bany, poultry; Ralph Clark, Cor allis, garden;- Mary Olive Mad dox, Corvallis, and Mary V. Brum baugh, Toledo, home economics. Vegetable and flower exhibit judges have not yet been named. The flower exhibit, gardners of Polk county report, is expected to be unusually fine this year. . Health examinations are now in he process of completion in the - annual 4-H health contest to pick . Folk county's healthiest 4-H boy and girL An innovation this year In the youth department will be the spe cial award offered for herdman ship in which a 4-H club member will receive recognition for doing the best Job of keeping his pen and stau area In the best condition during the fair. Lian County Fair Doe The Linn county fall 4-H fair win be held at Albany August 27 29. Walter Shelby has been named general fair superintendent Assisting will be Robert Schmidt. Karl Arnold, Gene Nygren, Harold MacHugh, all of Albany: Jim Ru by, Ralph Crenshaw and Carl Lim beck, Scio; Lester Estergard, Har ri&burg; Glen Hawkins, Shedd; Ho mer, Miller, Henry Kirk, Halsey; Dale Miller, Brownsville; L. J. Gatchell, Marvin Morin and Bill Luton, Lebanon; Ray, Irwin, Tan gent. -. An animal auction sale Is plan ned, for August 29 at 8 dju. The Clackamas county Yalr, which will, like the Polk county ' event, consist of both adult and junior divisions, runs simultane ously with the Washington county event, August 29 to September 1. Also of Interest to many Willam ette valley folk are the Pacific Na tional exhibition at Vancouver, B. C, August 22 to September 3, and the California state fair from Aug ust 30 to September 9. While these two latter fairs run almost sim ultaneously with the Oregon state fair, many traveling fairgoers are happy about this as they can make a circuit and , take in the three great western events. Most volcanoes have their erf gins in molten rock which leaks Linn County X-ray Survey Total 1656 r s - v I v ALBANY X-ray totals for the first week of the Willamette Val ley chest X-ray Isurvey reached 18,638 through Saturday night, In unni county officials said. The Saturday total for the ty was 1,557. I no iigures tori separate areas were available but survey officials said the response so far was fvery iej Funeral Rites Set for Pastor Two Morrow County Fair Buildings Burn HEPPNER. Aug. ZO-UPh- Two Morrow county fair buildings were leveled by fire yesterday. One of them was the aluminum 4-H club building. The metal was fused a live- also Killed Saturday lUtessaaa Newt Service ALBANY Funeral services for the Rev. Henry Arnold Rose, 40, Kiued in an accident early Satur day morning on the Santiam high way about five miles east of Idanha, will be held at 2 pjn. Wednesday from his church, the Florence Assembly ; of . God, of which he was pastor. His wife. Ruby, 33, was reported by members of the family to be in "critical condition' in a Bend hospital, s- where she was taken after the accident. Her husband was removed from the Weddle Funeral home in Stay ton over the week end ' to the Fortmiller-Fredricksen Funeral home here. He had been pastor of the Flor ence church since 1935. The Rev. Mr. Rose was born August 4. 1911, at Swofford, Wash, and on Nov. 13, 1S43, was married to Ruby Johnson in Salem. The Rev. Howard Mays will of ficiate at the funeral services, and concluding services will be In the Lincoln Memorial Park cemetery in Portland. 43 from the heat of the fire. The other building was stock barn. - :.- -County road equipment burned. . :, learned, but there was a dance In a nearby building the night before and it was thought ossibie a cigarette-caused fire smolder td through the night. . . t The fair board promptly decided to build open type livestock sheds to house entries at the September 1-9 county fair. 4 CUt' KCn FEOSPECTUS SHOW ttitMau Hews Service SILVERTON The Rev. Doug las siarreu, pastor of the Silver tor. Methodist church, announced at the Sunday morning service that the new church plant pros pectus would be presented at the Sunday morning meeting next Sunday with James L. Payne, ar chitect, explaining the plans, r Valley Births SUvertoa To Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Heuberger of Sublimity. son, August 19, at . the Silverton hospital. v GXASS HRE EXTINGUISHED Hitwn Newt Scrriee - f FOUR CORNERS A grass and stubble fire burning Monday aft ernoon on the John Hays farm, six miles east of here on Center st waa extinguished without serious damage by local help and the Four Corners Fire department. ilri Dooliille Recovers From Hurt Vertebra i snn. K HAYESVILLE - Mrs. Chester Doolittle, Hoodview road, is at home recovering from a broken vertebra sustained ! June 25 in a fall at her home. She has been in a local hospital. J 4.. Also brought home ever the week lend was Willi Powers, Port land road, broken in June 28. whose a fall right hip was at his home Salem Heights Garden : ! lUttoMa Mews Servfc- - - SALEM HEIGHTS The Little Garden club of Salem Heights will meet Thursday, August 23 at the home of Mrs. Mary McWain, on Fairview ave--for a covered-dish luncheon at 12 JO kfclock. Committees will be appointed for; participation in the Oregon State Fair, and final plans will be completed on the program plan ning lor the coming year. j :: ; 1 OFU CAMP OrENS - , i iiiiiitt Mews Service SILVERTON Smith Creek camp,! in the Silvei -Creek Recre ation area southeast of Silverton will be the mecca for a large num ber of young folk ion August 27 when the annual Oregon Farmers Union I camp opens j under the di rection of Mrs. Jessie Ulnic. She will be assisted by Stanley Vogt, director of education tor the Na tional Farmers Union. Current Jet engines need two of. tnree times the ordinary nicxej found In reciprocating engines. v Uestru In Salmon GATES New aquatic life was appearing in the Santiam river near here as fishermen .were re porting heavy catches : of trout, which were -apparently not af fected by the ammoniatluttered waters, source of death to an esti mated 2,000 salmon ten days ago. Residents aU along the river re ported seeing new evidences t of salmon, indicating that only part of the . run "was destroyed by the ammonia. Robert Veness, Mill City businessman, said that quite a few salmon could be seen Monday at the fish rack below Detroit dam. Heavy caon Area Even though the bloated, smell ing ! remains of many salmon still were lying along the banks of the river, trout were being caught in the! vicinity. Some pf the heaviest catches; Veness said, were made at the same spots Where the am monia -concentration had been heaviest No continued cleanup of the rivr was undertf&en -Monday, While the smell continues to drif about a! quarter of a mile from the area, residents said many . of the fish seemed to be drifting down stream and disappearing. GOP Accused of1 Piety Smirking In Report oh RFC - -" By Charles F. Barrett --- . WASHINGTON. Aug. 20-VSenator McFarlani (D-Ariz.) told the senate today that republican charges made against President Tru man, in a minority report on the RFC investigation are "political pop pycock. - j I j I : The majority leader accused the republicans' of "smlrkicg piety" and "demagogic political interference and innuendo.1. N6 one can charge ; the president with "per-1 sonal or official dishonesty" Mc- Farland declared. His attack was directed at a blistering report written by sen ators Capehart (R-Ind.) and Bricker (R-Ohio) as an aftermath of a senate subcommittee's in quiry into lending policies of the reconstruction finance corporation. - Bricker and Capehart said Mr. Truman and democratic national chairman William Boyle ; have transferred corrupt Pendergast polities' to a national level. They charged that Donald Dawson, the presidents patronage chief, has been proved "incapable of honest duty. They also hit at govern ment "blood suckers" and "politi cal parasites.. The charges against Mr. Tru man and Boyle, Mci arland said. are "the hokum." Ne Finger Pouting "No man living can point a fin ger at Harry Truman and charge personal or official dishonesty," McFarland said. "No man living can say Harry Truman is corrupt" Senator Fulbrlght (D-Ark.) characterized the charges against the president and Boyle as "scur rilous. . Three democratic members of the subcommittee came out with majority report asserting they have full proved charges the RFC, fell prey to a political influence ring "with White house contacts." But their version was much milder, ' more general, and didn't call names. Fulbright, who Is chairman of the subcommittee, said the GOP minority report was so partisan he regretted it had to be printed at public expense. Thus the subcommittee closed its books on a sensational year-old investigation of the reconstruction finance, corporations' the govern ment's big lending agency. V Refers lo Pendergast The republicans called Mr. Tru man and Boyle "graduates of one of the- most) corrupt political ma chines in the history of any state." ims was ajrezerence to the old Pendergast organization centered in Kansas Cityj Mo. Then they said the democratic leaders have moved "Pendergast politics to the national leveLy - Another attack ; on the repub lican report! came from Senator Benton (D-Conn.), not member 01 the rfc subcommittee but - a member of the full banking com mittee which; adopted the majority report and tent it to the senate. SaiTBentoni : - -fThis minprityj report seems to be a politics! document designed to undermine confidence - in our government! . . j. The tone and spirit of this minority Is so mis leading, that; it contaminates many sections of the; (majority) report which are accurate." ' The majority report was writ ten by Fulbright and joined in by democratic senators Douglas of Illinois and Frear, of Delaware. It supplemented aj report first issued last February sifter a quiet Inves tigation into i RF& After the inquiry started, con gress abolished! the old five-man board of directors and substituted a single administrator. W. Stuart Rosanna Richards OrWoodburnDie Services Today ' tutesaua Mews Itrrkt WOODBTJRN rtosanna Rich ards. 81. died Saturday afternoon at her home, 883 E, Cleveland st, Woodbuna. .. : Funeral services will be held at 2 pjn. Tuesday at Ringo chapeh Interment will be at Bells Pass! cemetery. 1 , 4 a She was bora June 29, 1870. hi Indiana and came to Wcodbura from. Oklahoma 2S years ago. She was a member of the Free : Meth-; odist church. - '.v I Survivors include theiwtdower. E. G. Richards, Wood bum; two sons, Ralph R. Richards; Endlcott,- Wash- and Howard E. Richards of Wena tehee. Wash.; ; daughters,' Mrs. Agnes Gould, Sheridan, and Edith; I. Richards, Woodburn; brother, J. W. Edmonson, Indiana; sisters, Mrs. 2Urada Stark, Florida, Mrs. Irene Liston, Indiana, Mrs. Edna Shanklin, Texas, Ural Mary btwaiiey, wooaburn. yriNGLE CLEANUP I : - -I KUALA LUMPUR HPV- Fifty- one communist terrorists, regard- ed as key men in the Malayan jungle war ! against the British security forces, have been I killed since January 1. A spokesman for the British director of operations said "nr.ore and more leaders have been killed because police and mi litary patrols are daily armed with more accurate Information" on terrorists' jungle hideouts. 1 - Symington how heads the agency and has made many changes. - The majority report called for1 tightening laws , on government lending and recommended a study of the need for the RFC The mi nority report urged congress ta abolish the agency. j i ATTEIITIOir LOGGERS AND FARMERS LOGS VmiTED 8-FL 1S-FL 'And Long Len3tha Al Top Price BiuMand Lumbar Go Phona 1125 J 1 J Tumar, Orecjca So many Americans live In trail ers today that more than 35.000 tons of steel went into trailer con struction in 1850, according to "Steelways", magazine. r 1 t-JZV 1 w 1 al7 CllT'frt rs Ctrlira Cir?sr; tzlsa, trip DUY MOW ON 'Salem, Oregon HERE'S I YOUR FAVORITE ALL-WOOL. - " ; I !'( r I ' i' I h i- U - L SLA-J L . SOME OKTiehfsFa Dat Parade WARMLY INTERLINED . . ! 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