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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1953)
frr I r "1 r Cfitty Mews DBirnelfS. r SCOUTERS TO MEET - I WOMAN LEAVES HOSPITAL m. T5- rfutrtr! Mrs. Jack Morey, 2180 Vaughn meetlna wiU he held Wednesday, St, -Who sustained to Injured Jan. 14. at 7:30 pjn. at the First snouiaer m an auu accmenx near -V.tior, r.h Plan, for the Kelzer Saturday night, was re- coming month, will be discussed. I leasm Salem General Hos Drastic reductions on all ready-to- ' r 1Mrm wear. Dresses up to $35 to $10 and! QUAKER AT wnXAMCTTE $15. Open evenings til 7 Lorman's, 1100 Edgewater. Singletons Gut Sheep Crop Below Average By LILLEE LMADSEN Farm Editor, The Statesman With singletons instead of twins and triplets appearing in sheep pastures this year, sheepmen are p JO. I vrvxaiu .daucjt, -vua.ci icyics reporung uiai .were may- dc . i ciiiauvc iv uis uiuicu uuu9i wui i smaxier crop ox sncfrp iuan . usuau appear in two public meetings at I aside fom the fact there , the GIRL HURT IX FALL I Willamette . University Tuesday. I ewe numbers are far below the Kay Nuber, 8, of 1287 S. 17th I The first will be at 10 ajn. In the j recent 10-year average. . fit Mit hr knee in a fall on a 1 gymnasium and the second at 81 While lambing . is just getting rusty tin can Sunday. Salem's first I p.m. in Waller Hajl on campus, well underway, growers are say- aidmen dressed trie wound gnat ue u npiwitruig uaaer we ausipces uig uni u uaw: uc tiituMm; snt the airl to a doctor for stitch-1 of the American Friends Service of more than one lamb to a ewe onuniHee unuer ine cnaurnansnip is uuuw avciagc nwuKi vi uvi of Ross Miles. uus situauon wui improve, ana LandscaDina and designing. .No JOD more twins appear in flocks, as too Urge or too small F A. Doer r-ia xnaxxNu ivniutfr the season advances, Is only flr and " Sons Nursery. OH Ln- inere win oe a oaiem men i euess SO Iar. Ml 1 C I 1 T W A. .5 A 1 . . . . . , f A caster Dr. at corners, rnone ocuwi r-iA wecuuve meeung ineep ana iamo prices recenv 2.2543. , 8 p.m. this evening in the school ly, however, have shown a strong- I office. All chairmen and officers I er rjriee trend, although farm BURNED BY COFFEE of the P-TA are invited to attend prices of lambs and wool are still Mrs. Blanche Cupp, 840 &nip- to make plans for the P-TA meet- well below parity values, ping Ave., was burned Sunday mg to be held Wednesday. Sheep and lamb prices through- when a glass coffee maker ex- . . out 1952 worked to lower levels. ploded. The burns were treated by TRUCK LOOTED SATURDAY The largest drop in prices oc- yii.js.up uruim. ueiousing wj u. CUrred during the latter nail oi cowman, u& n. nurcn at, 1952, the low point being readied was looted sometime Saturday at most markets during the fore night and police reports indicate part of December. ? the loss to be a new spare tire Nationally, the average farm price of lambs during December was the lowest of any time for that month since 1946. Lamb prices also during December, were the lowest for any month in the year since January, 1947. Salem first aidmen. Dwarf apples, pears and cherries. Just right for city gardens, ury- don'i Nursery, 415 So. High. and wheel as well as the lug bolts. No estimate of the loss was made, ARRESTED BY STATE Cov Pomerov. address unknown. was arrested by state police late CAMERA CLUBS TO MEET Saturday on a Woodburn justice The Salem Movie Club and the warrant charging he obtained Salem Camera Club will have a money by trickery and deceit. He joint meeting Tuesday beginning prices received at the farm on a was lodged in Salem jail in lieu of at 6:30 pan. in the Salvation Army national basis during December, $300 bail. HalL 241 State St. A nohost dinner Wpre a little over $9 less than , , lM Bnn1!prl will precede the business meeting during the same month in 1951. ;:ln? which will include elecUon of oi- shee? prices reached the low T. m ABA . uvun POIU I lllliV COI UC1 U1CU1 .mon 3-404. rTi - cfrn oor nrir trnd ARREST CHARGES LARCENY " " " 4 nn developed sooner. The December Keith Dean Bonner, 19, of Sil- " .. , "n . v "" farm price lor sneep was sugnuy "!,"U' c,, I State Hospital, will be the fea- h1hthan the low noint reached by Miorco;" srssst -V. warrant 1-0- EwdtoTK ZstT 5S held Ueu ol Too bSf SiSSSlSS YM ,1945; a-i level J.U1 uiv uauuu as a w uuic SENATOR AT ROTARY "".aJ C TVTV. . BIUUUU o.u the Oregon State Senate, wiU wv,ilo ftt vr WM wir- Dr. Leslie J. Carson, optometrist, speak at the Wednesday luncheon offered for saie in the vaUey dur hai moved hia office to 703 Lives- meeting of the Salem Rotary Club i- rwmKr W var there ley Bldg. in the Marion HoteL His topic is were more than during the past Moving-storage. "Across the street, Legislative Sessions." Earl T. Krerf ewe even the n called across the nation." Call Kuss rati, Newbry, chairman for the day, will cid "gummer" was bringing mim wsswv o.havi Still Cold Days Ahead Jackets marked down at The Boys Shop 65 No. High. Capitol City Transfer. Salem Obituaries Joseph Wirth Succumbs to Long Illness - from $35 to $60 a head. This year good yearlings with a percentage bred, have been obtainable for prices ranging from $15 to $25, and bred old ewes, still In good condition, were selling for $10. A few grade flocks were sold at higher prices, chiefly to newer farmers who had not yet heard that sheep prices were "no longer so good." Liquor Control Board Income FCKUDA Jo Yozo rukud. st resiaeace. Joseph M. Wirth, resident of "f..1 ' ZZZT rZvZ. I Salem since 1870, died at a nurs- Saiem, and son. Harry K. Fukuda. ing home Sunday following an Chicago, ill. Aisa urvivea oy s iisier mness 01 several years. to Jspan. services wui om neia moj. Recitation of the rosary will be Barrich Chapel. Cliurch services will held today at 8 pjn. in the W. T. be held Tuesday. Jan. 13 at 2 p.m. in Rigdon Chapel and requiem mass the Nichuren Buddhist Church. 1137 wij be conducted Tuesday at 10 A TVT TT 1 naX a m. in St. Vincent de Paul's Cath- At iNeW Hlgll . i.k r.v Kunhuhi ohc Church. Interment Is to be cl omcuunx. mends srs invited to both at St. Barbara's Cemetery. Net income from all operations services. Wirth was born in De Witt, of the Oregon Liquor Control vhampkon " ' Ian March 1, 1868. He came to Commission during the last fis- Oregon with his parents at the cal year reached $12,135,409 city. Jan. 6. at th age of 78 years, age of 18 months and resided in highest yearly net income in the Late resident of Route l. Box 58. Jef- the same house in North Salem commission's history and a 9.29 ferson. Husband of Ors Thompson. until moving to the nursmg home, per cent increase over the pre- Jefferson- father of Mrs. Mabel Jane .j T o r i ,m t,-;. ;- Hadley. Salem, Vernon Thompson, jei- I " "' w . v,uvmi j-" " viowiif ferson- brother of Russell Thompson, in Salem in 1936. Wirth. a re- i fewer cases of liquor were sold Stockton. Calif. Also surviving are two tired tile worker, was a member than during the previous 12- trandchUdren. of St. Vincent de Paul's church, month period. License and privi- w T. Rigdon Chapel with concluding Survivors, besides.- the widow lege tax collections also declined services in Bekrest Memorisl Psrk. of Salem, include son, Ferrell slightly, according to the com- . Willamette AFROTC Cadets Take to Air :'-.'v! -Y . 4. The Rev. Dudley Strain will officiate. Covalt, also of Salem. Births SMITH Areola Russell Smith, st the resi dence. 4185 Gardner Rd., Jan t. Sur vived by wife. Mrs. Hilda B. Smith; KaWtm: daughters. Mrs. Mildred Arnett. CaUf.. Mrs. Grace Spencer, Kichrnona, KIRKMAN To Mr. and Mrs. mission's annual report Commission statistics attribute the income rise to greater sales revenue after the federal tax on distilled spirits was increased from $9.00 to $10.50 per 100-proof gallon Nov. 1, 1951. Commission lrJSSL-iZi-fehwKTi2SS Gilbert Kirkman, 2247 Evergreen markup Is taken on total cost of m.. . .. , o..J T I w Kaschmitter, urangevuie. laano. mn. i Ave., a uauiiierf oaiuruaj, jau. guuus. Babe Evangeline Burton, oearue, iq. at Salem General HosDitaL mere were Z83 lewer licenses Wuh . and Mrs. Dorothy Jones, srv- I I .,-t vA iM,i.a erett. Wash.; sons. Wesley Smith, Sa- HARLAN To Mr. and Mrs.Ua-r iWtJrf f manfartr. En sS Second Cai.: st I Mrs. William Harlan, Mill City, a ers and importing distributors of children, Mrs. Junette Rothweuer, sa-1 son, bunday, Jan. 11, at Salem malt beverages and light wines T.V a.ZIuZI I General Hospital. were $938.98 less than collected w.it.V a nri.rtAn Bifair. Wash- aik- . . I aunng xrw previous year, maicai ter, Mrs. Grace Teda. Tacoma, Wash: I . T 7 i4 " mK no apparent increase in con- brothers, Ksrl and Don Smith, both of I ired Wilier, 3728 Monroe Ave., & I sumption of such beverages, ac- flKUJUU. JMtlllH.. uw "-". I SVU. OUUUai. Wail. 11. BL OttlClll jwwfnif a MvmwMlMfAM rfn.n S-rw r... will K. held Tueadav. ' i tt. ' ' '"'" w " wuuuaoawi. Jan. 13 at 10 a.m. in the Clough-Bar- - rick Chapel with the Rev. Dudley nciirp f. j t Gosiak, 572 Boone Rd., a daugh ter Sunday, Jan. 11, at Salem General Hospital." Strain officiating. "Interment In Bel- crest Memorial Park. PLANK Ervln Douglas Plank, in San Fran cisco, Calif., at the age of 50 years. Jan. S. Late resident of Salem. Sur vived by mother, Mrs. Grace Young, Kirklanct Wash.; father. Leland Plank. Mobiidge. S. D.; brother. Ken neth M. Plank. Salem. Services wfll be held Mondsy, Jan. 13 In the W. T. RMdon t Chapel at 1:30 pjn. witn xne terment at Belcrest Memorial Park. I auuaaj, wan. 11, at aiem (gener al HOSDital.. Mrs. Augusts K. Van Pelt, st the residence 1070 N. Church St.. Jan. S. Survived by husband. Abraham X. Van Pelt, Salem; two daughters, Mrs. . Doris Tucker, Salem, Mrs. Alice Cole man, Spokane, Wash.; son. Franklin Van Pelt, Medford: and five grand children. Services will be held Mon day. Jan. 12. at 1 JO pjn. in the Virga T. Golden Chapel with Dr. Paul Poling officiating and Interment at Belcrest Memorial Park. - . crooks "f" :r:t-:, --' ' Mary Alice Crooks, at the residence 1759 . Commercial SC. Jan. . Sur vived by four dsughters. Mrs G. H. Hansen, Mrs.' Roy . Shaw. , Miss Ethel Younj, ail of Salem. Mrs. Fred Ul lich. Seattle, Wash.; two sons. D- 1 bert Crooks. Salem. H. B. Young. Den ver, Colo.; nine arandchildren;. 1 sreat srandchlldren and one arrest. great grandchild. Services will be held - Monday, Jan. 12 at 10 ajn. in the Virgil T. Golden Chapel. Interment In City View Cemetery with the Rev. Dudley Strata officiating. KOCH t . ':'. : - ... v ": Mrs. Lorea X. Koch. 1st resident of no Hampden Lane, on Jan. io at a local hospital. Survived by daughter. Mrs. Robert . Becker, Salem; sons. Omal C Koch. Plaeerville. Calif.; Xrro! H. Koch. From berg. Mont.; John C Koch. Campbell. Calif., snd Norman C. Koch. Nam pa. Ida.; 21 grandchil dren and 20 great-greatchildren. Pri vate services will be held from the Clough-Barrick Chapel Monday. Jan. .12. Please omit flowers. WntTH ' ' . ' Joseph IL Wirth. In this city, Jsn. 1L LaU resident of 1085 Tile Rd. Husband of Mrs. Iva R. Wirth. Salem, snd fath er of FerreU Covalt. Salem. Several nieces and nephews also survive. Reci tation of th rosary will be held Mon day, Jan. 13. at pjn. la the Chapel of the W. T. Rigdon Company. Re quiem mass wiU be conducted Tuesday. Jan. 13, at 10 a.m. in St Vincent de Paul's Catholic Church with -interment i at St. Barbara's Cemetery. 1 Public ulecords BOTES To Mr. and Mrs. Ron ald Boves. 2325 S. Cottaee St.. a son. Sunday. Jan. 11. at Salem 1 MUNICIPAL COURT General Hospital. Orville James Olson, Albany, cnargea witn driving wnue intox- uiiKiv to Mr. and Mrs. rn- lcated and rxsted $250 baiL est Clark, 1173 Eighth St, sonT Joseph M. French, Newberg, charged with reckless driving, held in lieu of. $50 baiL WsUlltl With Har , .Jl -Jf ..'tv' Gerald Dailey . Noted British Quaker. Mem " ber . of ; Quaker r Mission to Russia In 1951. For S years Quaker Observer at United Nations General Assembly. Tuesday, January 13 : T r TnOlIEETIIIGS' Vmamettw U. Gym 7. V. WaUsr Hall ( 10A.M. . , 8P.M .. .. . Talks to B FoDowsxi by Question Period - ; NO ADMISSIOIJ - 5- ' ' ' ' - - ' " ' " - . Meeting Sponsored by American Friends Serrlc fVT Willamette University Air Foree ROTC eadeta prepare te board a C-4 for their Indoctrination flight over the Salem area. Left to. right are. Stan Stlendorf JrrSan Mateo, Calif.; Mel Marcnm, Nyssa; Vern Zeuske Jr. and Neil Dangherty, both Salem; Donald fluff. Eugene; Daryl Girod and Marlon Pat man, both Salem; Larry Prltchett, Lebanon; James Toote,' Salem; William Tan Horn, Roseburg; and LL CoL Thomas Wiper, - commanding ef fleer of the $34$ AF Reserve Training Center In Portland, who directed the flight. v i Today at Fire School Starts East Station s A regional fiie school spon sored by five agencies of the state, will be conducted for Salem area firemen today through Saturday at the East Station department, 17th and State Streets. !: Fire Chief Ellsworth Smith ex plained that the school is conduc ted to provide learning J tech niques for smaller departments so that they in turn can take this knowledge back to their oiwji lo cales. The school 1 sponsored jointly by the1 Oregon Fire Chiefs, the Department of Vocational Edu cation, State Fire Marshal's De partment, League of Oregon Cities and the State Association of Fire Fighters. , It was announced Saturday that the Salem fire department re ceived national recognition this week for its control of the Nov. 1 fire at the Hrubetz and Bushnell steel fabricating plant. Recogni was made in "Fire News," offi cial publication of the National Fire Protection Association, in a list of important fires throughout the nation. The department was commended for showing outstand ing planning - gained from "the benefit of pre-planned fire fighting strategy." Nursing Home in Silverton Planned Statesman News Service SILVERTON Mr. and, Mrs. E. R. Patterson are awaiting approval of the plans and blueprints of their new nursing home by the Oregon state board of nursing which is expected soon. The contract will then be let out on bids. The blueprints were approved recently by the state fire marshal and are now in the hands of the state nursing board for recom mendations. The new 40-bed nursing home is to be built on land adjacent to No One Hurt in Wreck, But Youth Has Broken Leg GATES Four Independence youths escaped injury when their late model sedan skidded and rolled over here Sunday afternoon. But one of the passengers, David Stump, was taken to Mill City hos pital with a broken leg. ' The quartet was returning from Hoodoo Bowl where young Stump incurred the fracture. The car was driven by Jerry Noble. Other passengers were William Pruiett, who was thrown out jof the car, and Gary Burch. Noble said he was passing another car near the Gates city limits when he hit a slick spot and lost control. Funds Sought to Pay for Travel of Drum, Bugle Corps The Portland Police drum and bugle corps is scheduled to travel to Washington, p. C, to take part in the Eisenhower Inaugural pa rade as a representative group of the state. i ' The campaign to send the group is under the direction of fWilliam Phillips Sr. and E. Burr Miller, both of Salem. Statewide chairman of the project is State Senator John Merrifield. William Healy, assistant secre tary of state, has been designated to lead a campaign for funds among state officials ard em ployes, beginning Monday. Esti mated cost of the jaunt is $15,000. A previous; suggestion that groups from several cities in the state send mounted representa tives to the parade was dispelled recently when the Oregon; Mount ed Posse Association learned from parade organizers in Washington that such a plan would make the parade too long. ' the present nursing home 6n South Water Street, but to the 'rear of the present structure and will ex tend back to within 20 feet of the creek. ! Dairymen to Meet Tuesday At Gorvallis Milk production and marketing will be discussed by key men of the industry at the 59th annual meeting of the Oregon Dairy men's Association to be held at Corvallis Tuesday and Wednes day. R. W. Morse, secretary of the association, says representatives of dairy products, processors and retail outlets will discuss current problems in Oregon's rapidly shifting dairy picture. Discussion will include prices of milk and butterfat content which have come in for so much public dis cussion recently. Also of special interest will be the state's declin ing number of dairy cows which threatens Oregon with becoming a deficit dairy products area. R. S. Waltz, Seattle, manager of the Consolidated Dairy Pro ducts Company, will discuss sub stitute dairy products at the first day morning session. - At the second morning meeting S. Eugene Allen, - secretary-manager of the Oregon Restaurant Association, Portland, will ex amine the relationship between dairymen and restaurants. E. Wayne Laird, chairman of the milk marketing committee of the Oregon Independent Growers Association, will talk on milk marketing. Scheduled for inclusion in the second day's program is a group discussion on disease control, production testing, artificial breeding and marketing and production. Election activities of the association will close the con vention. All meetings will be held In Withycombe halL KIDNAP VICTIM HOT PHILADELPHIA (jP)-Bob Scha- fer,. Villanova'i sharp - shooting forward who wa s described ear ner Saturday as the victim of a kidnap ride by four strangers. scored 33 points Saturday nigni to lead his team to a 94-86 win over Xavier of Ohio, i . The Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Monday January 12, 19S3 3 . ; Lecturer raymen Beginning Monday, January 12th 1203 FAI10US DRAIID UGHTWEIGHT PURE VIRGIN t, iwsi -:r r ... ! . SCODBUS Well Known Brand f Regularly $10.95 now y OIILY In y Sky Blue, Aqua, Green, Beige, Hunters Green, Wine, light Grey and 'Sea $lue. ' - - ' We. were able ie boy these shirts and give you this tremendous saving because they did not meet the manufacturer's weight specifications. They are perfectly tailored end are first class in every respect. This Is the opportunity ef s lifetime Buy several today! mm ' y -. An' - L Popular. - . c 'Sixes ' ; ::3 3. i2i s 0?SI ALL DAY SATURDAY in r-s aim if 01 u j The Cieet the Trclna Eua Oa" tsto . x - ' Jobless Top UGC Inco me -. Payments to unemployed work ers during the past four- years topped employers' taxes by more than $15,000,000 or about 30 per cent. State Unemployment Com pensation Commission tabulations showed here. . -. . ; k i Although final figures "are not yet available, ' unemployment as sessments for the 1849-52 . period are estimated at slightly over $50,000,000, while payments to the unemployed were about $65,500, 000. Nearly $7,000,000 of the dif ference was made up by interest earnings on the benefit trust fund. Comparison of the tax-benefit ratio by main industries for the 1949-52 period reflects trend es tablished since the war. Payments to manufacturing employes have exceeded tax contributions in nearly every line, but wholesale, finance and realty, transportation and utility firms have paid in more than enough to meet com pensation allowed to their former employes. , - . " Retail trade benefits have ex ceeded taxes by a small margin, while service and construction lines have a somewhat larger unfavorable" balance. Food pro cessing leads with 197 per cent of its taxes figured as benefits while lumber and logging pay ments are- almost exactly 150 per cent of their- assessments. TOASTMASTERS TO MEET. The Salem Toast masters Asso ciation will hold a Tegular meet ing at the Marion Hotel Tuesday night, starting at 6 o'clock. Sched. uled speakers . include Wallace Cowen, R. Keaton, Sydney Schle- slnger, G.. J.- Tucker and Everett Wilcox. Arthur Erickson will serve as toastmaster. Next week the organization will hold its an nual competition for "Speaker of the Year" honors. Ladies are in vited to this affair. In most cases lightning jumps from a positive charged rloud to a negative .charged earth; but it is sometimes the other way around. , :i M ' ' '-. Dr. George Gaylord Simpson, American Museum of Natural History department chairman, who will deliver the annual Con don lecture series for the publie at University of Oregon Jan. 13 and 15, Oregon State College Jan. 20 and 22 and Portland State College Jan. 27-28. Jersey Cow Wins Rating StaUsmaa Ncwc Service WOODBURN A registered Jersey cow owned by H. Mikkel son & Son, Jewell Jersey Farm, Woodburn, has been rated a tested dam by The American Jersey Cattle Club. Volunteer Eagle Betty, won the distinction for having ' three offspring , with official production records, i The cow's progeny averaged 9,789 pounds of milk containing 579 pounds of. butterfat. The- records were made under one of the programs of official testing of the American Jersey Cattle Club which has its national headquarters in Columbus, Ohio. r mi I let's ride with the State Patrol TONIGHT!, "Could This Be You?" I Shars k thrill of 10 ... 90 ... 100 miU-an-Kour chtt. Hr tK aelual veicat f traffic violators racordad oa ths icana. 7:00 TONIGHT - USUI r ; 1S90 On Your Dial Attention Salem Sub-Contractors Sub-Bid Wanted On Proposed BERGS KEIZER MARKET Salem, Oregon Kindly Submit Proposals by January 15, 1953 to Smith-Phillips Co., General Contractor 1402 S. W. Macadam Ave., Portland 1, Oregon Phone CHerry. 7523 Ugvj paciniO cmiDireideS llundrtds ef lovely Dttortrtor colon 1 1 fill Rolf Hit Te a beaolifvl tzM A i . - brut fa eat kocrll K2apcbt ovarii , : IcrebitWKiltll Itrstaj btssryll tm-tt beautirol colors trans pose the beaaty and freshness ef e spring day right into , Tourlsome. '' EsavCote colors impart to you the joy of Bring is a fresh ' atettinf of beauty. ' Ckxllon 5.07 Quart 1.G3 yrrr n nn7 Onali.Lyu ' a lllM n7 as iZ3 Center 2-2173 V