Cfily News UBirfieffs PHOTO TRIP PLANNED Plans for a conducted picture taking tour of Detroit Dam next Sunday, July 13, have beea an nounced by the Salem Camera Club, and those wishing to attend are asked to write Dr. Henry E. Morris, P.O. Box 31, Salem. The tour will leave the First Metho dist Church about 8:30 a.m. Par ticipants are asked to bring a lunch. ANTIQUES? Go (o LAMBERTS closeout sale every item every item a bargain. Nothing reserved. Fresh killed, plump turkey fryers, 4 to 6 lb. average, for 4th of July dinner, 49c lb. Orwig's Market, 3975 Silverton Rd. Phone 2-6128 SERVICEMAN VISITS Sgt. Melvin W. Karn, stationed at Williams Air Force Base at Chandler, Ariz., was a recent vis itor at the home of his father, Albert T. Karn, 1350 Troy Ave., Salem. The sergeant's twin brother, Cpl. Marvin W. Karn, also is stationed at Williams. Their older brother, Alfred M. Karn, a naval reservist, now of Salem, spent a year in the Korean area. Don't miss LAMBERT'S big close out sale. Everything goes at cost and less. Air-Steamship tickets anywhere. Kugel, 3-7694. 153 N. High St. RETIREMENT FILED Notice of retirement from the Donald Supply Store, a retail feed establishment, was filed Saturday by Walter E. Mills with the Mar ion county clerk's office. Camera sale for July 4th week end. Some used and discontinued models. McEwan Camera Shop in Hollywood. KIWAMANS TO PICNIC The Salem Kiwanians will hold a basket social at the Salem Golf Club Tuesday beginning at 6:30 p.m. Basket lunches will be auc tioned off by Mayor Alfred Loucks and Councilman Robert White. 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. STEUSLOFF TRAINING Ivan Steusloff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Steusloff, 245 N. 13th St., is attending the Quartermas ter Reserve Officers' Training Corps summer camp at Fort Lee, Va. Steusloff, a student at Stan ford University, will take six weeks of field training. Johns-Maiivllie Roofing applied by expert workmen, nothing down. 36 months to pay Mathis Bros 164 S Commercial. Free estimates 3- 4642. TOWN SENDS TO MEET Townsend Club 6 will meet on Monday, 2 p.m., at 259 Court St. The public is invited. Frank's House of Carpets and Draperies, 2715 S. Commercial. Phone 4-6313. Blood Bank Due in Silverton Monday The Red Cross bloodmobile will be in Silverton Monday. During July the bloodmobile will be in Salem three times and July 9 at the Assemblies of God convention In Brooks. Next Salem visit will be Thursday at the Ar mory. Others will be July 11 at the state penitentiary and July 30 at the Elks Lodge. Births LAYTON To Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Layton, 3640 Osborn St., a daughter. Saturday, June 28, at , Salem General Hospital. HOLT To Mr. and Mrs. Wil fred Holt, 5465 St. Croix Rd., a son, Saturday, June 28, at Salem Memorial Hospital. II EIDER To Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H eider, 1435 N. 18th St., a son, Friday, June 27, at Salem Memorial Hospital. nn 0 UlILILlJ j Yes, you Har better with a Zenith "Royal" or "Super Royal," or your money back un der our unconditional 10-day re turn privilege! And , , . here's what a Zenith Hearing Aid offers you: Exclusive new ceramic PTKMAPHONt. performs efficiently Under conditions where others of ten fail ? Reserve Battery Switch flu ii "" Come in for FREE Packet of Emery Board Coeftart Cleaner Batteries and Repairs for All Makes and Models of Hearing Aids mums optical co, A COMPLETE HEARING AID CENTER 444 State SU Phone 3-552S REPRESENTATIVES LEAVE Leaving this week end to at tend a company meeting of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., are Edward J. Burnside, Wood ford T. Moore, Clifford Thomas, Albert E. Ullman and Harold Westfall. They will represent their company because of their writing of new insurance in 1951. Select your gift items now at LAMBERT'S big closeout sale. Settlement of Disputes Boosts Jobs in Oregon Settlement of most labor dis putes and a steadily maintained pickup in seasonal activities have brought about employment recov ery throughout the state this month but the job total continued slightly below last year's high, the State Employment Compensation Commission has reported. In mid-May 439.700 persons were in non-agricultural activities as against 445,700 the month be for and 455,600 in May, 1951. While June reports are not ex pected to reach last year's 468.000, the return of about 16,000 workers involved in labor - management differences and new calls for farm, food processing and other seasonal help probably will restore 1952 totals close to earlier trends. Insured unemployment dropped steadily to the lowest figures of the year. Only 5034 continued claims were reported for the week ended June 19, compared with 3588 a year ago and 7586 two years ago. Transitional initial claims being taken at local em ployment offices for the 1952-53 benefit year, starting June 30, were coming in at about the same volume as in 1951. The number of those seeking jobs was slightly higher than last year, but was de clining steadily from the 17,078 reported on June 1. Metals, machinery and ship re- pairing continued to account for ! most of Oregon's employment gains, while lumber, construction, i transportation and food processing 1 were lagging behind former : marks. Primary and fabricating : metal plants reported 9100 jobs in May, a gain from March of 600 and 800 more than a year before. Ship repairing was furnishing work to about 1500 more persons than in 1951. while a few other i industries also were bettering for , mer records. The number of lumber jobs last month dropped 11.600 from the I 81,800 reported in April and was nearly 17,000 behind last year's total of 87,100. Return of most workers Jo mills andvoods is ex pected to bring up June figures close to the 88.600 counted a year ago, officials said. Construction at 26.800 was 1500 below May, 1951, totals, while food processing at 15,100 lagged 800 behind the comparable number. Seasonal pickups this month may remove some of this lag, it was : indicated. Hotel Greeters Meet in Salem Oregon chapter 26 of the Hotel Greeters of America and the Ladies Auxiliary of the Chapter, held a buffet dinner meeting in the Senator Hotel. Host for the event was W. W. Chadwick, owner of the hotel. New officers of the group were installed during the business meet ing. Retiring president is Austin R. Seavy of the West Linn Hotel in West Linn and new president is Dave Feves of the Nortonia Hotel in Portland. Mrs. Ray Boyle of the Hungerford Hotel in Portland was re-elected president of the auxiliary. Fossil shell remains have guid ed geologists almost since the study of geology began. nn avoids tmbtr. rassment and inconvenience. When "A" battery is exhausted, flick switch, presto! . . . reserre battery instantly takes over. Come in for free demonstrauon. tn Oaikductton Ovvlnt 4aiUW t Moderate Sura CM. County Demo Board Retains Robert Shutler Robert Shutler, Salem, was re elected Saturday as chairman of the Marion County Democratic central committee at a meeting of committee men and women in Mayflower Hall. Shutler had been named to fill the unexpired term of Luis Martine-Lally a year ago. Elections of officers and naming of committees were principal busi ness of the meeting as the Demo crats decided to sidestep an op portunity to nominate fourth can didate for state representative for Marion County. Cornelius Bate son, A. M. Vistlca and W. W. Chadwick, a Republican, were nominated at the primary election in May. Elected to serve with Shutler during the next two years was Mrs. Mildred Bateson Pratum, vice chairman: Mrs. Dale Brews ter, Salem, secretary, and P. W. Hale, Salem, treasurer. Roy Hewitt and Mrs. Vada Walker, both of Salem' were elected congressional committee man and woman. Earl Reynolds, Gary Neal. Donald Peterson, Dav id Bloom and Alvin Whitlaw were chosen district nominating com mitteemen. Peterson. Mill City publisher, was named alternate to the chairman, and Mrs. Lena Hewitt, alternate to the vice chair man. Kenneth W. Bayne, onetime county chairman, and Mrs. Irma Lindquist were named congres sional committee alternates. Hewitt, delegate to the Demo cratic National Convention in Chi cago, beginning July 21, gave a report on the meeting of Oregon's delegation held in Portland Satur day morning at which Terry Schrunk, Multnomah County sher iff, was chosen chairman. Dele gates had been divided 6-6 before State Treasurer Walter Pearson withdrew in favor of Schrunk. Mrs. Aebi, 48, Salt Creek District, Dies Statesman Newt Servic DALLAS Mrs. Clara Aebi. 48, died at her home in the Salt Creek district Friday evening alter an illness of four and one-half years. A resident of the Dallas area for 37 years, she was the daughter of Henry and Rose Classen and was born Jan. 30, 1904. She was mar ried to Alvin Aebi Nov. 23, 1926, who survives. Also surviving are two sons, Orville of Dallas and Carroll of Kessler Air Force Base, Miss.; her father, Henry of Dallas, three brothers, Henry, Elmer and Nor man, all of Dallas, and two sis ters, Ruth Aebi and Agnes Voth, both of Dallas. Services will be held in the Salt Creek BaptiFt Church at 2 p.m. Tuesday, with the Rev. E. Wolff officiating. Interment will be in Salt Creek Cemetery, under the direction of the Bollman Funeral Home. Cotton Crop Said Over-Estimated WASHINGTON P) A House 51hrnmmittpf aiH fiatiirflav an ( . j over-estimate of the 1951 cotton crop by the Agriculture Depart ment caused a serious break in cotton prices and a resulting loss of millions of dollars to cotton farmers. A large part of the ,over-esti- ,.- T - t&HaajEYt t v-- r i J ' j 171 r"r'-trrif,ii,wT r"ff .m. I ntw iwrniot nmr J yJ i i cats si aiw AtrtoMic-iri , Six Big Reasons Why Oldsmobile It Your Buy I The famous "Rocket" Engine gite more pouxr per dollar than any other car on the road! The "drive" U Oldsmobile'a nru Hydra-Matic Super Drire . CM Hydraulic Steering giieaf pu effortleaa new command of the car! There's more readability than erer with Oldamobile'a rigid, rujiged. smooth-going chaaeia!kThe rerolutiooary Autronic-Eye dims your headlight auto matically! Interior are truly luxurious in every detail of color, cushioning, and trim. But you can't appreciate the Super "88" until you drive it! Visit our showroom . . . toonj LODER THI ., Marion 4-H- Youilis Elected at jg y-y 1 a These Marion county youths were officers in each of their living- units during the 1952 4-II summer school. June 17-27, at Oreron State College. Rear, from left: Ed Page. 16, Salem: Lorraine Duda. 14. Mt. Angel, and Kay Shideler, 16. Salem, were vice presidents. Joyce Mount, 13, &alem (front, left) and Jennie McGuire, 15, Jefferson, were song leaders. Edwin Fronk Succumbs at San Francisco Edwin A. Fronk, longtime resl- i dent of Oregon, died in San Fran cisco, Calif., at the Southern Pa cific Hospital where he had re sided since last November. Fronk was born in Marion, Ore., Nov. 9, 1874. He married Henri etta Bertha Rubenow Sept. 23, 1903. in Oregon. He retired from working for Southern Pacific in 1943 after be ing employed by them for 52 years. A former resident of Sa lem, he moved to Eugene in 1937. While living in Salem he was in itiated into the Elks Lodge. He was also a member of the Order of Railway Conductors. Services are to be held in Eu gene with interment in St. Bar bara Cemetery in Salem. Survivors inciude the widow, of Eugene; sons, John M. Fronk, in the Army in Ballimore, Md.: Robert A. Fronk, Mt. Angel, and Edwin A. Fronk Jr., Salem; a daughter, Mrs. Stanley J. Ziol kowski, Eugene, and nine grand children. mate "could and should have been avoided," the Agriculture subcom mittee told the House. SEE YOUR QQ3 mm BROS. OLDSMOBILE COMPANY, 465. CENTER STREET KEYS ARI WAITING! DRIVE OUR SPECIAL "ROCKET" SHOW CAR TODAY! Liquor Stores to Close July 4,5 State liquor stores and agencies will be closed Friday and Satur day, July 4 and 5, the Oregon liquor control commission an nounces, both days being declared legal holidays by Governor Mc Kay. Oregon law provides that liquor stores be closed on election days, Sundays, and legal holidays. Private clubs which have mas ter locker permits may not sell liquor containing more than 14 per cent by volume on either July 4 or 5, as such sale also is prohibited on legal holidays. 777' f ill NEAREST OLDSMOBILE DEALER Summer School Hi Mark Hatfield Subject of Story Mark Hatfield, Willamette dean of students and state representa tive of Salem, is the subject of a biographical sketch feature in the J une 29 Oregonlan magazine section. The article was written by Travis Cross, former States man staff member now with the ; department of higher education in J Eugene. I Hatfield leaves Salem Sunday i for Chicago with Mrs. James W. ' 1 Mott where the two will rep-! NOW! U uu o BARGAINS GALORE on All . . . Shoes . . . Stockings . . . Sportswear . . . Dresses . . . Lingerie . . . Bags HV.-Ar mpr Drir. C The Statmcm, Sohm, Owym. Sunday. June 23. 19S2 -5, Palmason to Conduct at U.O. Music Camp Victor B. Palmason, band direc tor at Salem High School, is leav ing today for Eugene where he will conduct an orchestra for three weeks at the University of Oregon s Music Camp. Maurice Brennen, Willamette University band director is to take Palmason's place in the Salem summer music program. Students from Salem who will travel with Palmason to Eugene for the Music Camp are Jon Ha gen. Cute; Virginia Graham, flute and piccolo; Douglas Richardson, bassoon; Ann Meeker, oboe; Rob ert Pence, oboe; Ralph Sipprell, clarinet; Lyn Laswell. alto clari net; James Fiske, cornet: Larry Kyle, drums; Louisa Lamb, cello, and Karen Johnson, string bass. Schedules for the Salem summer program (unchanged during Pal mason's absence) are as follows: The day-time program for ad vanced and beginning classes is conducted from 8:30 to 10:20 ajn. at the Salem Senior High band room and from 10:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. at Leslie Junior High. The evening program is held Monday evening from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m., at Le lie Junior High for the jun ior high band and Wednesday eve ning at 7 p.m. in the Senior High for beginners who work during the day and 7:30 for the high school band. Participation in the Salem sum mer program is urged by director j Palmason or "the onlv alternative i will be to drop the plan and reg ister another blow to the musical future of Salem." FRANCIS SMrTH ELECTED WASHINGTON Francis W. Smith of Salem, Ore., manager of Credit Bureaus, Inc., was elected a director of the Associated Credit Bureaus of America at the nation al conference here last week. resent Oregon on the Republican platform committee prior to the national convention. EHEE Ccc No fob too small.. No poco toe fori Lesier DeLapp Truck Service 1115 N. Commercial Ph. 2-1750 Listen to "Information Please Tonight at 8:30 K.SLM. W HoV.eaac Wr.n. A P 3 Heads Lions V" Newly elected president f International Aawrtattan Lions Clubs Is Edxax M. Elbert f Maywood. m. Elbert was elected by a winhnwi vote at ' the 35 kh annual eoaventioa of- the association which closed -Satarday in Chicar. in. Elbert occeeds Harold P. Natter mi Camden. N.J. GROCERS STRIKEBOUND SEATTLE CP) - The major part of Seattle s wholesale grocery in dustry remained tied up Saturday in the third day of a strike by AFL Teamsters. Negotiators re cessed after a five hour session Saturday and scheduled anolb meeting Sunday. DROP IT! WET IT! SMACK IT! Only Croton It Fully Guaranteed The ONLY notch of its kind! waterproof trouble free CROTON A curator CK0T0V1 -Tim dmt the time for perfect i AU STEEL CASE, M5.00 Now... st last a trwible free tch. No need to briBg it in for time adjastaaeat. CROTON's famous "Time Control" enables ro to rege late your watch for perfect timiif. A simple turn lie J: -I .L - L L i . . ,1. - A. 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