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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1952)
Cfiiy News UBirfieffs BUKN8 MAN HELD A Burns man, Richard Doyle 31unt, was held Sunday in the Marion County jail in lieu of $350 bail after he was arrested Sunday morning by state police and charg ed with driving while intoxicated. David Paul Smith of Silverton, charged with reckless driving, was released by the sheriffs depart ment on his own recognizance. Safe-Permanent removal of super- gous hair from the face. Erich of ew York. 3-3921. We buy newspapers and maga zines. Phone 2-2S75. PROGRAM FEATURES RED CROSS The radio program, "Dateline Korea," sponsored by the Marine Corps from 5:15 to 5:30 p. m. to day, will feature a story on Red .Cross and USO activities in Ko rea, Frank Parcher of the Marion County Red Cross said. Another shipment has arrived of the famous Westinghouse Auto matic Electric Clothes Dryer. Yeat er Appliance Co., 375 Chemeketa. Phone 3-4311. Reroof estimates and roof repairs by local experienced workmen. J-9894. LYNCH DAVIDSON DIES HOUSTON (JP) Lynch David son, 78, one of the state's best known lumbermen and fa former lieutenant governor of Texas, died Sunday at his home here after a long illness. Johns - Manvllte sningles applied by Mathis Bros.. 184 S. Cora'L Tree estimates. Ph X-4M. ' Castle Permanent Wavers, 305 Livesley Bldg. Phone 3-3663. Per manents $5 and up. Ruth Ford and Evela Arnold. At Salem Schools PARRISH JUNIOR HIGH Candidates for second semester associated student body offices at Parrish Junior High have filed pe titions and chosen their party ticket. The field of candidates will be narrowed Wednesday for the final election Friday. At Parrish, each candidate has to run on the ticket of one party. The parties are called Liberator and Studenteer. Candidates running on the Stu denteer party ticket are: President, Dick Oglesby and Clennon Mooref vice president, Florence Bennett and Barbara Dodson; secretary, Lorraine Owen; treasurer, Joan Harrison, Marlene White, Judy Welche and Kathy Cook; sergeant at arms. Rocky Hubler and Carol Williams; assistant sergeant at arms, Pauline Jarvinen and Ken Schrecengost. Eighth grade council represen tative, Sharleen Simons and Donna Lebold; seventh grade council rep resentative, Marlyn Reamy, Ian Brydon, John Gallagher and Dor othy Vaughn: girls' league presi dent. Sue Syring; girls' league vice resident, Danell Hamilton; girls' eague secretary, Car la Hender son, DeAnn McClaughry and Mary Lou Burr is; boys' league president, Denny Jones and Larry Powell; boys' league secretary, Bruce ClaKerburk. Liberator party candidates are: President, Dick Pearson; vice pre sident, Jan Woodroffe; secretary, Diane Miller and Knubs Shepard; treasurer; Pat Gilmore and E or ient Johnson; sergeant at arms, Chuck Keiper; assistant sergeant at arms, Douglas S toller; eighth grade council representative, Christine Kulseth, Barbara Force, Cherie Poyfair and Carol Werner; seventh grade council representa tive. Donna Hamman, Patty Evans and Jim White. Girls' league president, Betty Burnside; girls' league vice pre sident, Jan Morley, Janie Kizziah, Karen Helton and Sirry Kailvee; girls' league secretary, Dorothy Pehorwood. Margie Olson, Patsy Edstrom and Ton! DeSart; boys' league president, Vern Lentz and Dave Sacolofsky; boys' league vice president, Bob Hunt and Ira Fei telson; boys league secretary, Mike Holland. The song queens and yell kings who were elected at the first of the year will serve the entire year. WASHINGTON SCHOOL The first and sixth grade stu dents and teachers have been hosts to parents at their noon lunches for the past two weeks and starting next week the stu dents and teachers of the second and fifth grades will conduct a similar project. Cafeteria cooks are Mrs. Gladys Oliver and Mrs. Gertrude Rehm. Several parents are special guests each day. ASSOCIATED FUEL OILS I Co1 K o J oCoUchd HOME FUEL CO. SS 2-4119 ESCAPES CAUGHT An escapee from McLaren School for Boys was retaken Sun day by state police in the 3800 block of East State Street where he was found sleeping. Dr. Marshall. Osteopathic physi cian and surgeon. 329 Oregon Building. Phone 3-5509. Wheel chairs, hospital beds, rent and sell. Ten to four o'clock. Max Buren, 745 Court St. Phone 3-7775. Fresh killed turkey, cheapest meat on th market. Orwigs Market, 3975 Silverton Rd. Phone 2-6128. Theresa Lowry hair stylist now at Price's Beauty Salon. Phone 3-5859. Former Salem Woman Dies In Portland Mrs. Edna V. White, 73, widow of a former Salem policeman and a former resident of Salem, died Saturday in a Portland hospital. She was the wife of W. J. White, who worked for the police depart ment prior to his death 32 years ago. She had lived near Gresham for the past six years. Mrs. White came to Salem with her parents when she was 12, from Viroqua, Wis. where she was born in 1878. She married about 36 years ago. She is survived by sons Ellis P. White of Longview, Wash.; George D. White of Salem; R. Evans White of Pasadena, Calif.; a daughter, Mrs. Velma Bayer of Hoqulam, Wash.; brother, F. B. South wick of Amity, and a sister, Mrs. Earl Jefferson of Junction City. There are also eight grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Services will be held Tuesday at 10:30 ajn. In the W. T. Rigdon Chapel, with the Rev. W. H. Ly man officiating. Interment will be in City View Cemetery. Workman Churned to Death in Pulp Mill Vat HAMMOND, Ind. (IP) - A 39-year-old workman was churned to death Sunday in a paper pulp mixing vat at the Keyes Fibre Co., of Hammond. Police said another workman accidentally turned on the agita tor, a device like a huge electric fan, while Kenneth D. Roberts was working in two feet of pulp inside the vat. SAN FORD To Mr. and Mrs. Kent Sanford, 583 W. Madrona St., a son, Sunday, Jan. 27, at Salem Memorial Hospital. KUCERA To Mr. and Mrs. Laddie Kucera, 1348 Lee St., a son, Sunday, Jan. 27, at Salem General Hospital. ADLER To Mr. and Mrs. Her bert Adler, 2545 Bolton Blvd., a son, Sunday, Jan. 27, at Salem General Hospital. Births !! 1 1' westing Tha LAUNDROMAT Auttzxlk tVojkr-Tha Vestinghouso CLOTHES DQYOCl Novrhw mbm will you find thmo EXCLUSIVE FEATURES XUtim$f LAUNDROMAT iw cosftnar WOCHS YOUR CLOTHES on tho erdix' ivo Weigh-to-Save Door. You always wash the right amount of ckrthea in the right Amount of water with the right amount of soap, SAVES SOAP AND HOT WATER. Soft the Laundromat' Water Sever Dial to cor respond to the weighs of tho load SmoA. JUarfuuw, Regular. Too save gaOooa of bo water and soap, too. WASHES CLOTHES SO CLEAN. Patented WASHaway. RINSE way Actioa of tho Laundromat gentry and thoroughly each piece aaMour your hand touch, And whoa clothes are may dean because dirty waea ire drained aaary from through theml vea SALEM'S Draft Horse Breeders Talk Of '52 Festivals BY LHJUE L. MADSEN -Farm Editor, The Statesman Six-horse hitch entries In Oregon festival events during 1952 were plans discussed Sunday by the Oregon Draft Horse Breeders As sociation. Roy E. McCay, Eugene, presided at the dinner meeting held at the Marlon Hotel. Miss Helen Althaus, Troutdale, was present as secre tary, with members in attendance from Eastern Oregon, Washington and Multnomah Counties and up and down the Willamette Valley. Particularly stressed .were plans for one hitch drawing a float for the Portland Rose Festival in June, and three or four sixhorse hitches for both the Pacific International Livestock Association in North Portland in October and the Ore gon State Fair at Salem in Sep tember. Miss Althaus reported that "Childhood Memories" was the theme of the 1952 Rose Festival and that she believed the draft horse entry would be very much in keeping with this. Appointed as a committee to make plans for this were Mrs. Lenora Althaus of Troutdale, Mrs. Alys S. McCras key, Walter Andregg and Mrs. Gladys M. Everett of Portland and Joseph Fex of Troutdale. To meet with the Pacific In ternational Livestock officials in an effort to re-Instate the six horse hitch at their October vent, Tracy Andregg of Portland, Ray mond Kooch of Enterprise and Carol E. Buckley of Vernonia were made a committee, and to inter view Leo Spitzbart of the Oregon State Fair, Mr. McCay, B. M. Thomas of Brownsville and Mr. Fex were named. Del Harmon, Stanfield, insisted that the state Legislature appro priated $35,000 each year for the furtherance of animal husbandry at the Pacific International and believed that part of this might be converted into bringing the draft horse event back to thj;t show. "Don't think that the public doesn't know good hitches," Mr. Andregg stated, as he urged the association only to use its best, equipment and its best drivers. "There is no more popular event in any of the fairs and shows than the old six-horse events, but they have got to be good." Accident Fatal To Pedestrian PORTLAND UP) Melvyn E. Baker, 74. died at a hospital here early Sunday a few hours after he had been struck by a car while crossing a street in the southeast section of Portland. Driver of the car, Tony T. Ku rar, also of Portland, was cited for having an improper operator's license. The accident was Portland's fourth traffic fatality of the year. REDS BURN 2 BUSES SINGAPORE (JP) Communist terrorists derailed a plot train and burned two buses Saturday in Ma laya, causingat least one death. bo WITH THE 5 Yes, whole SO lb. drum of that wonder detergent "AM . . . hV ma do especially for use with automatic washers! And ... if yours, abtoiutoly froe with tho purchase of a now Laundromat! For a limited time oniyl Coma In today. hoiise wee hod rloan, they and the appliance CO. OLDEST EXCLUSIVE ELECTRICAL APPLIANCE STORE Process Developed by Salom V3an Maos-Produces Color Pho4o Prints i4 .t X. - Kenneth W. Ash ton, Salem photographer, helds a sheet of eelor pheU prints mass predated by the dye trnff-r hi-oacm with aid of maehine as right which he designed. The printing enlarger Is eoatrolled automatically by a series of aatematic timers and switches ea paael studio Is at 498 N. Chorea St., believes he is the first to mass proauee work. (Statesman photo.) Dye Transfer Makes Color Pictures By DON DILL Kenneth W. Ash ton doesn't know whether he is a mechanical genius or just a lazy photographer. Whichever quality it is, the result is his inventing a machine to turn out color photo prints on a mass production basis. The color photos are made by the dye transfer process ... a method which any photographer will tell you is well nigh impossible to mass produce. But Ashton and ; his machine may be to the mass j production of color photo prints j what Henry Ford's Model T as-1 sembly line was to the automo- j bile. Ashton has been a photographer in Salem for 16 years, operating j the r lreside Jfortrau service, ne- cently he opened a new studio at 498 Church St. In the darkroom of this new studio are the ma chines which he started planning nearly six years ago. With them Ashton says he can make dye transfer color prints from color negatives in large enough quan tities to compete with the cost of familar black and white prints. COMPLICATED PROCESS The dye transfer color process is one of the oldest for producing direct color photo prints, but it is very complicated and exacting. Briefly, the process consists of making three separate matrices from a color negative or color positive. The matrix is compa rable to a photo negative being a clear gelatin support which will absorb a dye in proportion to the amount of light to which it was exposed through the original color negative. Color positives must bo EMM PURCHASE OP fforfefcwM CLOTHES DRYER Tea as WWic aoa IroanWr Wamos eat efOenW Orratg EXCLUSIVE DRY-DIAL. Set it for Damp or Dry. Clothes come from the Dryer on the Damp setting just right for ironing. On tho Dry setting, bone-dry fluffy, soft, ready to sold and pot away. HANDY SHELP-DOOR. Only on the Wsstinghouee Dryer will you find that con venient loading and unloading shelf-door. No scooping or bending to load or unload this Dryer. The opening ie at Just the right height from the floor. WESTINGHOUSE AIRFLOW SYSTEM. Deeacned to blow warm, dean ear directly into the drying doth. Dries dothee quickly tnorougniy. i&ooaoaucal. too. r .... 1 reduced to three negatives, one for each color. The print is made by soaking the developed ma trices in dyes. Dye colors used are cyan, magenta and yellow. The matrix is then placed on a sheet Df wnit paper and rolled to trans- fer h. dva to the nair. each paper. matrix being super -imposed upon the other. The blending of the dyes then produce a full color print. CORRECT EXPOSURE Secret of the dye transfer proc ess is correctly exposing the ma trix so that after it has been proc essed it will absorb no more, nor less, dye than necessary to repro duce the original color of the sub ject photographed. This quality of the matrix formerly made it nec essary to process only one color print at a time, making the prints very costly and available only through custom processors. To overcome the time and labor consuming drawback of this proc ess Ashton uses Ektacolor film to take his pictures, and has devised a system of pre-determining the exposure needed for each color by the matrices from the color negative. This is the closely IF "MX" A NEW LAUNDROMAT! Laundromat 299.95 Dryer 218.85 375 CHEMEKTA ST. it 1 -i r"1- ir - , s. 4 i t la center. Ash ton, whose portrait aye transrer color prints in stuaio guarded heart of Ash ton's process. Rivals Goldberg To achieve mass production Ashton has devised a machine which rivals the inventions of Rube Goldberg. Taking an ordi nary commercial five by seven inch enlarger Ashton first sus pended it from a rolling platform above his work table to give him mobility. A traveling filter turret can be positioned between the en larger lens and the matrix, and is operated by a solenoid and motor at the touch of a switch. Under the work table which has openings for different sizes of masks, depending on size print being made, a vacuum back easel travels on worm gears and roll ers, operated by solenoids. This permits printing as many as a dozen different color photos on a sheet of 16 by 20 matrix mate rial. Thus, when making the final color prints Ashton can dye and roll a dozen or more photos at the same time, rather than Just one. Ashton estimates that 80 per cent of the hand work Is cut by his mechanized enlarger-printer. Another version of Ashton's machine used for black and white prints can automatically print photos with a saving of about 20 per cent in time and labor. While Ashton states that he Is no mechanical marvel Just a lazy photographer, an observer would feel that he has used much mental and physical energy to produce his amazing "Galloping Gertie" enlarger. gets clothes jr.lFM!rlK mmow Tho gtcrt mgau golem, Oregon, Navy Reports On Activities Of Valley Men Activities of several Valley serv icemen were reported Friday by the U. S. Navy. Two Salem men are undergoing recruit training at the U. S. Naval Training Center in San Diego, Calif. They are Dale L. Boyd, whoso wife lives at 398 Bliler Ave., and Richard L. Fisher, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher of 690 S. Commercial St. Another Salem man, Richard L. Aeimann, is a gunner's mate aboard the carrier Badoeng Strait operating in the Far East. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rei mann of 2915 Blossom Dr. Spending a rest period in a rest and recuperation center In South ern Japan is Sene D. Snook, sea man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Snook of 1230 Claggett St. Snook is regularly attached to the de stroyer tender Piedmont. Four Valley men are serving aboard the heavy cruiser Roches ter in the Korean area. They are Robert H. Barkhurst, whose wife lives in Silverton, and James E. Ball of Valsetz. The other two on the Rochester are brothers, Clyde .O., and Carl C. Williams, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Carl O. Williams of Dayton. Recently graduated from the commissary school at the Naval Training Center In San Diego was L Edwin J. Christie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jess C. Christie of Dallas. He completed recruit training Sept. 5, 195i: A Lebanon man, Richard L. Os terman son of Hiram D. Oster man, was promoted to staff ser geant while serving with the 3499th Mobile Training Group at Chanute Air Force Base, 111. On the destroyer James E. Keyes In Korean waters is Robert E. Thomaston, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Schmidt of Stayton. PRICE HIKE AUTHORIZED WASHINGTON (JP) - The gov ernment ruled Sunday that many makers of glass products used by druggists in filling prescriptions may raise their ceiling prices. Among the products affected are: stopper-type bottles, citrate bot tles, power and ointment Jars, and capsule and tablet vials. wmm 3D(dflGtenfiB flfcHMfcEB &B3W Guarantood Washablo! Now you too hove woshoblo Wall and woodwork of breath, taking beauty with Super Kern Tone . . . o dirt repellent ond water repellent as your new plastic shower curtain. It's ready to use . . , In a complete range of colors! It's morvelously easy to apply! It dries In less tHon on hourl It's guoronteed washable or your money bockl i mo! K mSk I VM k o o 1 whk l . MfS oi, 1 ilWMn mmmt mo (JUL 450 ILL UUCLUfaL Monday, JanncrrT 9. If SX Dads Week End . At U.O. Feb. 2j 3 : I' -if UNIVERSITY OF REGON, Eu gene Oregon Dads will bo hon ored guests on the University of Oregon campus this week end, Feb. 2 and 3. Their sons and daughter are planning to see to it that Dads will feel like Kings for two days instead of one. ' 'iy , Activities for- the 23rd annual Dads Day celebration will start Saturday morning with the regular executive committee meeting of the Dads. A traditional Dads Day luncheon will be an event of Sat urday noon, followed by a business session of all Dads. Dinners will be) held in the several living organiza- . tions and the Oregon-Washington basketball game will bo the big at traction of the evening. Sunday events are planned by the houses. BLOOD GD7T8 TOTALLED WASHINGTON (JPl The Red Cross said Sunday that in the past 18 months It has received blood donations for the Armed Forces to talling 1,225,000 pints. It said about 160,000 pints of whole blood wero shipped to Korea, and that the rest was processed into plasma.: Tele-fun by Warren Goodrich "I'll ust give you the 'bear facts now. Someone ma want to us this party-One." . . .When you're a considerate telephone user, everybody gets better telephone service! . . 4 Pacific Telephone. 1.59 4.93 Quart Gallon DM ht im'i "feettMM" trmm pw tiie Im (nil w.tk ! ommBf Ipotwr U m k . . hit d ef looting In h w w tf Mo paintt, it rm on MrfecO nd it ootilir wmKoS Hr Cantor v n niff 1! 77 f if I mmmi ,