Cfiity Mews HBrfieffs COMMITTEE MEET FRIDAY ; A meeting of the Robert Tbor ton for Attorney General will be held Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the residence of Mis. Ncn Thompson, 460 N. Winter St The public is in vited. . . . . . - . Rummage sale over Greenbaums September 28-27th. Cherry Court Amaranth. Rummage sale, Salem Lion Club Auxiliary. Sept. 24, 9 am. Over Greenbaums. -. ELFSTROM TO SPEAK R. L. Elfstrom of Salem, chair man of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, is to speak today noon" at Gearhart at the annual convention of the JOregon licensed Beverage Association. Special--Peat moss. Monday it Tuesday. Free delivery. Valley Farm Store. Phone 4-3624. Card of thanks We wish to thank the neighbors and the Fire Department for being so prompt and helpful at the. fire. Mrs. Minnie Westergaard , and Vernis. Births SALEM BIRTHS ZAK To Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Zak, Netarts, a son, Monday, Sept 22, at Salem Memorial Hospital WILSON To Mr. and Mrs. Ger- aid Wilson. Marion, a daughter. Monday, Sept 22, at Salem Mem orial Hospital. ALDERIN To Mr. and Mrs Raymond Alderin. 2750 S. 12th St. a daughter, Monday, Sept 22, at baiem Memorial Hospital. FULLER To Mr. and Mrs. Dale Fuller. Gervais. a1 son. Monday. Sept 22, at Salem Memorial Hos pital. HAMMEL To Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hammei; 2380 E. Nob Hill, daughter, Monday, Sept 22, at eaiem Memorial Hospital. F1TZHUGH To Mr; and Mrs Lloyd Fitzhugh, Independence, a ton, Monday, Sept 22, at Salem f 1 T T Ja CLUB RESUMES MEETINGS South Salem Progress Club will have a no-host dinner at 6:30 to night at Leslie Methodist Church, its first meeting of the f alL Presi dent Roy Adsitt said the meeting is open to the public. 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. , , . Fresh - killed turkeys to bake or fry. 39c lb. Orwig's Market 3975 Silverton Rd. Phone 4-5742. Call Mathis Bros! 3-4842. Free estimates on your Roofing prob lems. '. - - Tr - - rn limiting Lit ass Scheduled by Night. School (This 1 another in a series f ar ticle! concerning the 33-conrs adult el notion program of Salem public schools. A new night school term starts Sept. 22, with registration oa the first night of each class. Bulle tins with complete Information en all classes are available at the adult ed ucation office la the School Admin istration Building. Fees for classes average $5 for the It-weeks course.) Members of the class literally will be in stitches when the adult education program of the Salem Public Schools opens its fall term next week. . . This will be the class in knitting. Program director George Porter says this course, new this year to the curriculum, was instituted at the request of a group of Salem women interested in knitting. Under instructor Mrs. Ruth Ny berg Barber, long-time knitting en thusiast the class will take up all phases of the clicking needles activity including new stitches, new ideas in knitting. It is open to be ginner as well as experienced purl ers. ' - The class will meet each Wed nesday night from 7:15 to 9:15 p.m. in room 201 at the Salem High School, beginning Sept 24. Mrs. Barber now operates a knitting shop near Turner. Circuit Court Jury Panel for 1 . ' T . 1 issued limn Call for 100 persons for possi ble jury duty with Marion County Circuit Court during the October December term was issued Mon day. - ... " . ' Half the panel whose ' names were drawn are to report to the courthouse (in the Salem School Office Building) at 9:15 ajru,- Tuesday, Oct 7." The remainder form a reserve panel to be called up as needed. On the regular panel are: LeRoy A. Clinker, Lynn F. Cronemiller, Edith L. Shipp, George R. Allen, Goldie K. Carter, Irene G. Smith, Elizabeth L. Bag ley, Frank D. Bligh, Bernard D. Brown, Orphia Simpson, Daniel W. Casey, lone B. Dorcas, William E. Aigeltinger, Ruth Hill, Laura M. Wood, Jerald B. Burns. Cor delia M. Baker, Lana M. Beech ler, Merlyn J. Gunnell, Hubert C Berry hill, Vida V. Bowers, Harry E. Aston, Mabel E. Cooley, Janet H. Frees, Sue H. Hunt Winifred Hockett, Mary C Walker, Frank H. Bentley, Mary B. Noland, Car mella Hulett LeRoy E. Barker and Emma Noack, all of Salem. Kenneth J. Brown, Aurora; Ma rie B. Loar, Harold Schott, Gladys Anderson and Carl E. Jorgenson, Silverton; Arthur Harrison BueU, Shaw; Edward J. Manning and Creighton B. Jones, Gervais; Hen ry D. Miller, Glen C. Carothers and Roy R. Dickenson, Woodbum; Frank W. Kirsch, St Paul; Jack L. Wolfe, Mill City; Paul Jacquet, Sublimity; Fred E. Wolf and Oscar M. Olsen, Chemawa; LaVelle Hase- man, Detroit; Edward J. Bernt Mt AngeL The reserve panel includes: Clarence E. Greig, Harvey E. Dunn Jr, Billy G. Kelso, Arwin L. Strayer, Charles E. Lapschies, Lawrence M. Ackerman, Wilma M. Hpbson, Willis E. Hillerick, Jerold R. Andrus, Eugene D. Hanneman, Sherman Smith, Jack Henningsen, O. Max Burns, Blanche Clark, Pe ter Beck, Claude W. Ames, Harvey E. Parton, Ferrel W. Covalt, Viola Burson, Howard B. Jenks, Gene vieve Oldenburg, Bertha L. Foren, Robert B. Cunningham, Mabel R. Jackman, Melvin S. Cummings, Margaret Arehart, Dorothy Fish, Clarice Batterman, William H. Holsteihs Draw Top Prices At Heifer Sale Holsteins topped Jerseys and Guernseys Monday in price range at the annual" Marion County Dairy Breeders Association heifer sale at the Oregon State Fair grounds. High animal was a Hol- stem, a bred heifer, consigned by Mrs. George Kruse of Mt Angel and sold to F. E. ZielinsM of St PauL .- -The four Holstein heifers sold averaged $277.50, while. 17 Jerseys averaged $148.67 and 15 Guern seys, $154.67. Managers explained that one three-day old Jersey heifer calf sold for $30 to bring the Jersey average down. Arthur Enderson of Silverton wag the buyer. The total 38 head sold broueht $5,957 to average $165.49, just $5.93 below the 1951 average. Ben SudteU cried the sale as sisted by Roy Benson. A good sized crowd attended and bidding was quite brisk throughout Sign-Up Halted By Air Force Air Force enlistments from the Portland area, including Salem's station, were halted Monday for the remainder of September, due to "saturation." Salem already has signed up 12 men, about normal for a full month at this time of year, according to T. Sgt William Vanderpool, re cruiter here. He said a new quota is anticipated for October. The Portland area has enlisted 161 men so far this month. . Moss, Rudy F. Calaba and Lois Keefer, all of Salem. . , Roy Davenport, John V. Beals, Clara S. Moser, Vina R. Plane, Herman O. Vigeland, Donald R. Meyer and John H. Maulding, Sil verton; Ole Benson, St Paul: Wil liam Darling, Chemawa; Eldon E. Hart, Theodore J. Denson and Earl L. Baker, Woodburn; Howard E. Jones, Hubbard; David Hampton, Jefferson; John A. Ferschweiler, Gervais; Olen H. Spiva, Turner; Sylinda M. Schmidt, Scott; Mills; Russell A. Murphy, Mt Angel; Martin Barber, Stay ton. mm r r unfair Pmenf UNFAIR law tfvts cdalshtretot l c3 ffctse dictatorial pow$rs m onn y r--N n 1 1 1 1 n ll -i m n n MUM: U19J W fair j Prcposid FAIR law wfl gfvt adaititstralcr tinted powers, strictly defiatd Q - ,1 Ha dictates milk prices mokes yon ; pay MORE than necesscry ; He not only fixes the price the consumer must pay for milk, but . also fixes profit margins for both retailers and wholesalers, and fixes the farm price of milk. No other state permits its milk supply to be so completely regimented as Oregon, and all of these powers are concentrated in ONE MAN who Is responsible only to the State Board of Agriculture. The purpose of all these powers is to maintain the present big margin between farm price and consumer price, and give ASSURED PROFITS to the middleman, by holding prices UP by law. price cm EUXIIXATED He has NO control over resale prices of milk but he does set a minimum farm price Milk prices will be subject to competition, like any other food. Economies in distribution can be passed on to the consumer without violating the law, because the administrator will have do power to fix prices at wholesale and retail levels. But in order to assure the public an adequate and stable milk supply, the administrator, after pablle hearings, will allow the tanner a guaranteed price based on his cost of production. He limits the RICHNESS of mflk . J . " The present milk administrator dictates how much butterfat you are pcrmitte'd to have in your milk. This is another way be has of eliminating competition. No milk distributor is allowed to give you greater value for your money. It's against the law. Ha has authority to put limits on richness FOOD CZAS The milk you buy must be truthfully labeled to show the per SQUELCHEO centage of butterfat in the milk, which enables you to see at a glance the richness of the milk you are buying. The only regulation hmbbX on richness will be the city, state and federal laws now in effect which set minimum standards on butterfat. . He has absolute power over dairy farmers x - - He decides which dairy farmers will be allowed to fill our needs and how much Grade A milk each farmer can sell. No fanner can sell milk for home and restaurant use without permission from the administrator, even though the farmer meets all Grade A standards. Any Grade A milk that the administrator does not admit to the market must be sold at a lower price for manufacturing uses. cm R0G-TIE FARMERS He does NOT have authority to deny market to dairy farmers ( All farmers wbo meet Grade A qualifications are permitted to sell on the Grade A market. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture studies how that cities having free markets have the largest per capita consumption of milk, giving the farmer a bigger market. This study also shows that these free market cities have the smallest spread between farm price and consumer price lower cost to consumers, higher price to fanners. He can (and does) keep new competitors out ol the mHk business , No one is permitted to start a milk distribution business without the consent of the administrator, and his official orders make it dear that no such consent will be given if the administrator says such new business might disturb existing distributors. Nor can an established distributor extend his business into another area without official consent. . , K9 STATE PROTECTED KC?CPCLY He CANNOT deny o men the right to start a new business ; The administrator will have power to issue or revoke licenses to milk distributors, but the reasons for denying or revoking a license are clearly stated in the law and are only for the purpose of protecting the public and the milk industry against unscrup ulous operators. He has no arbitrary powers to deny a'man the right to engage in business. ; - . - , He is appointed by a farm board end Is responsible only to entrenched milk Interests : The administration of the present milk control law is entirely in the hands' of those for whose benefit the law was passed. The actions of the administrator cannot even be appealed to the courts except under "writs of review." Thus the courts are not permitted to examine the facts, but can only question the manner by which the administrator arrived at his decision '! K3 Lcnz FAvcsmsa He Is a servant of ail the people appointed -by the governor The administrator will be appointed by, and responsible to the governor, who is an elected official. The law prohibits anyone serving as administrator who has a financial interest in the milk industry. All official orders of the administrator are subject to full review by the courts, which may examine the facts of any case and decide whether the action of the administrator is arbitrary or justified. THE FAIR MILK DILL WILL DO t)N YOUR BALLOT NOVEMDEtl 4 VOTE YES 332 for a mfflt lav that's fair to you The FAIR Milk Bill, called the MILK PRODUCTION. AND MARKETING ACT, was put on the November ballot through the efforts of the Affiliated Milk Committees of Oregon in association with your local Milk Committee. Is represents the work of hundreds of volunteers, some from your own neighborhood, who circulated the petitions. Although less than 27,000 signatures were required, over 43,000 citizens actually signed the" petitions ia 28 Oregon counties during a short (ix-wcek period. If approved in the coming election, the proposed MILK PRODUCTION AND MARKETING ACT will automatically replace the present Milk Control Law; AFFILIATED U1LI COmiTTiliSi OF OREGON Fold Adv. AKltated U3k Cuapaiga Committee ml OttsoaJUrs. Irca Tartar. Cfcatrau. 42 Prk Bld Portlaad, Otssa. IPelbMe IE3ei?dlo MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICA TIONS, j . ; . Dugan Ritts, 63, t barber, and Mary E. Burke. 48, woolen mill in spector, both) of Portland. William S. 1 Witzel, legal. lumber buyer, and Frances Brandon, legal. secretary, both of Eugene. - . Richard Johnson, v 18, . sawmill worker, Silverton, and Qotine Blaney, 18, clerk, 910 Norway St., Salem. - . ! ' y - Lloyd G. Uecker, . 33, minister. 1743 Nebraska Ave., and Mary Jo Hall, 26, secretary, 4020 Lancaster CIRC L IT COURT i ' Geraldine L. Panger vs State Unemployment Compensation Com mission: Case dismissed upon stipulation. ', Robot Jack Payne .vs Myrna Ruth Payne: Divorce degree to plaintiff awards defendant custody of minor child, ownership of auto and specified personal property, and awards i plaintiff ownership of real property and other personal property. I . ; Elmer L. Hoffman vs., Nina A. Hoffman: Complaint for divorce alleging cruelty. Married July 28, 1948, at Bonner Springs, Kan. Roy and Katbenne A. Brown vs. Paul W. and Delia M. Harcourt: Complaint seeks to annul contract for purchase of real property , by plaintiffs oq grounds of misrepre sentation of water rights by defend ant, and Judgement of S4.080 plus taxes and insurance premiums, for damages. I.. Robert L. Vogt vs. Helen L yogi Defendant files answer and cross- complaint for divorce alleging cruelty and seeking division of real property. - . State vs. Frances Brown: De fendant waives indictment and pleads guilty to charge of forgery. continued for pre-sentence investi gation. State vs. Brutus Ashcroft; De fendant pleads innocent and in nocent ' by reason of insanity to charge of first degree murder; trial set Oct 28. State vs. Jack Melzer: Defend ant pleads Innocent t. charge of larceny by embezzelment. State vs. Robert B. Steele: De fendant given suspended sentence. placed on three years' probation on charge of non-support. State vs. Kathryn M. Cross: De fendant sentenced to two years in State Penitentiary on charge of knowingly uttering and publishing a forged bank check. FINNISH LEADER DIES . HELSINKI, Finland UPi Fin land's first president, Kaarlo Juho Stahlberg died Monday. He was 87. Husbands! Wives! Want new Pep and Vim? Tboummteol teupttm an md. werMot. xhut4 nMi tweaum body lrk mm. For Dew rtm. vlullty. try Oftm Tool Tabtoa. Ceaulia Iron you. (oo, may oaad tor pep; Dm ttamla Bi introductory 11 arounnran aua, asaoai nam mc At all drug stores everywhere in saiem. at area Meyer s. i ThV Statesman. Salem,' Ore Tuesdar. September 23, 1S525 At Salem Schools SALOI mGH SCHOOL Tri-Y officers presented a pro gram at Salem High School de signed to familiarize Salem High girls, especially sophomores, with the Tri-Y program. Betty Zahaf a, president of the General Tri-Y clubs opened and closed the program in the 'style of a Tri-Y meeting. Sandy Carter gave the prayer. Virginia Graham talked on Tri-Y activities followed by an address on "the purpose of the Tri-Y" by Janice Coffel. Pat Deeney ended the ceremonies by telling the girls about, registra tion. ' CARTOONIST DIES STAMFORD. Conn, in Harold Tucker Webster, the cartoonist who created the character, Casper Milquetoast, died Monday aboard Columbia River Chinook SALH0I7 For Canning Or Freezing Lb, "' Fins Ihit 216 N. Commercial a railroad train, while traveling to his home here from Bridgeport Webster observed his 674b birth day Sunday. . - . - top: RECORD HITS The Glow-Worm'' Mills Bros. "Walking to Missouri" Sammy Kayo lady of Spam" Eddy Fisher "I Went to Your Wedding" Patti Page . Hear These Records And Many More i Every Day en KGAE 1 1439 Ke. . t Open Friday N'ighrs Til 9 P.M. Downstairs Oregon Bldg. State at High 1 W - ' ; - - - , i ' ' 1 if ' ' ' :- 1 . II - v Hi it v.fwii , ' v. CN ' 1 m t i.;.- . . v w I Mr O . a. -' i !m-1 a ii' '. - - - ;--f -I; d-j S hi .-I IMAM . " " ! is r it ry . V f r it n 4 f 0 Cjl l5 4tl ' ij a - 1 ti, .Jt v .9... I . i- I 4J 'VI ;: r T fi -ii if Yakima's 10-year Growth Record. Telephones in use Up 140 Population up 31 ainiiairmt' i "" ..-: . ...... m Although Yakima like many other Western towns, has grown amazingly in the past decade, its telephones have grown even faster. What's going on in Yakima? Youj may find this is the tele phone story of your town, too 1. Lying at the foot of the majestic Cascade. Mountains in central I Washington is fertile Yakima County, now rank ing sixth in agricultural productioiytmong all the counties in the nation. Its economic center is the city of Yakima which, of course, has shared the county's growth during and after. World War IL Our Yakima exchange area has, for instance, grown from about 54,000 population in 1942 to morej than 71,000 in 1952. Prosperity has come to the val ley, too, The county's income, in 1942, was about $59 million. In 1952, it will approach $161 million.: And in these figures lies the: challenge of a decade of record-breaking telephone growth: More people in the area with more money to spend for telephones. Here's how we accepted that challenge. r Mrs - ...... . ii - , i''-::...r..x-...::: i .. .. " . . i , 4 3. Telephones went in-and fast as a result of our put tinir mora than ti million into Yakima's telephone plant in ; just ten years. Today there are about 23,000 telephones in Yakima. In 1942 we served about 10,600. But even this in crease, rapid and expensive as it was, hasn't been enough, For a time, we practically caught up-, with Yakima s de mand for new telephones. But, once again, more people in Yakima want telephones, than our equipment there can . serve. Yet, in the face of materials shortages, well keep doing our best to take care of our present orders. ..as well as those which we know still lie ahead. 2. We began building new telephone facilities in the city of Yakima shortly after materials became available follow ing the war. An addition three, stories and a basement -was added to our telephone building, enlarging it by more than 50 per cent. We put in more than 28,000 miles of wire between 1946 and 1951. We had 43 operators at work in Yakimai in 1942. Today there are 142 operators. We put in enough central office equipment to double our call-handling capacity between 1943 and 1951. - Pacific! J t elephone Your telcphono is ono of today's best bargains ft If mini i mm ii i - -- - Throughout the West, the Yakima story has been re peated in hundreds of places. , Fast as the population has prown, the telephone haa grown at an even faster rate ...twice as fast, in fact, in the territory we serve. For at to day's prices, the telephone ia mo economical more people can afford it... so useful, more people want it . . Kill .