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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1953)
8 Tli Statesman, Salem, State Jaycee Conclave To Bring 500 to Salem The vanguard of approximately 500 Junior Chamber of Com merce members and their wives from the far corners of Oregon will, arrive in Salem tomorrow for the start of the organization's three-day state convention here. Douglas Hay, president of the Salem Jaycee unit, which is host group to the conventioners, said that committee meetings will be gin Friday afternoon. He added that the main business meeting, including election of officers, will take place Saturday. Climax of the convention will be a banquet and dance Satur day night at the State Fair grounds. Horace E. Henderson, national Jaycee president, will fly from his Williamsburg, Va., home to attend the convention Saturday and speak at the ban quet. The session will begin Friday noon with registration of dele gates at the Senator HoteL Com mittee meetings will follow. An informal dance will be held that night in the Capitol Koom ot tne Senator. The main business session will get underway Saturday with an 8 a.m. breakfast Mayor Alfred Tnrk will welcome the defe cates. The session will get under way under the direction of State President Lawrence )u. V iarry ; px-Salem resident, now residing in Eugene. nthr Officers Other state officers include Donald A. Reitzer, Salem, secre- tarv-treasurer: national directors Raich Cobb of Eugene and Al Krieg of Portland; district Vice- presidents Wendell uronso oi Lebanon. Lou Irfmer of Oregon f!itv. William Haaelstein of Klam ath Falls. Albert Gray of Bend and Michael Zimmerman of Pen dleton. Committee reports will take place Saturday morning followed by a noon luncheon with Donald Schoedel of Spokane, WaslL, a national vice-president, as speak er. Main candidates for the state presidency, which will be decided at Saturday afternoon elections, are Cobb and Krieg. Reitzer and Harlan Roth of Silyerton, state publications director, are contes tants lor tne oiuce 01 aisirici 4 (this district) vice-president Ha r pins Toastmaster Officers will be installed and awards for outstanding clubs and officers will take place at the 7:30 o'clock banquet that night in the main exhibit building at the fairgrounds. George Huggins, Salem, will be toastmaster. The dance will follow in the same building. In addition to President Hen derson there will be at the main table Richard Matheson, Washing ton State Jaycee president, Ore gon Jaycee officers, and state and local dignitaries. A brief meeting for new busi ness and last-minute resolutions will be held Sunday morning at the Senator. Following this dele gates will be invited to visit Sil ver, Falls Park and to be guests of the Silverton Junior Chamber at a picnic luncheon at Silverton .City Park. Former Jeycees In other convention activities a Seattle CDA Office to Close SEATTLE (J Director Roger E. Dunham said Wednesday the regional office of the Federal Civil Defense Administration will be closed June 30. The office has supervised activi ties in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana. Its work will be shifted to the Berkeley, Calif., of fice. Dunham said the main motive In the shifting is one of economy. Ford to Lay Off 85,000 Employes Due to Walkout DETROIT UP The Ford Motor Co., announced late Wednesday it is laying off 85.000 employes throughout the nation because of strike at its Canton, Ohio, plant Most of the employes will be laid off during the next five days. The company said "the enforced layoff got underway late Wednes day at the big Rouge plant here. In a statement Ford said the strike at Canton had cut off forg Ings and parts used in Ford cars nd trucks and Mercury cars. The CIO United Auto Workers called the strike nearly five weeks ago the company said. f " COHTinEUTALJ SAILVJAYS J Sow 204 o rm4 lpt : i;l'M; J San Francisco IV '1540 Los Angeles llNG YOUR BUS CENTER Continental Pacific Trail ways Bus Depot 520 N. High St Phone 3-2815 Salem, Oregon Ore - Thursday Mar 2I 9S3 state organization of a group call ed "Exhausted Roosters," com posed of former Jaycees who have reached the organization's maxi mum age limit of 35, will be form ed Saturday noon at a luncheon at the Senator. In charge will be Milan Boniface of Salem. Visiting women will be enter tained Saturday noon and after noon at a luncheon and program at the Columbus HalL This will be sponsored by Salem Jayceettes under direction of Mrs. Blaine Cline, president Stanley Schofield and Clyde Cook are co-chairman of the con vention. Other Salem Jaycee com mittee chairmen include Maurice Cohn, housing; Robert W. Cole, registration; Gordon Keith, tran sportation; Kenneth Free, fin ance; B. H. Strum, program; War ren Cooley, ladies' entertainment: Floyd R. McNall, banquet; Lloyd Hammel, banquet nd Vern Wads worth, entertainment Old Fashioned Wb.Six 1.95 WiJb. Size 1.05 24b. Size 1.35 1 2-lb. Size 1.20 l ib. Size 1.10 Vi-lb. Size .95 8.40 Sel of 6 .95 r MODELS! 1. Dishwasher- 1 Sink Comb. 2. Under Counter ) Model 3. Stand Alone Model f Fits Any , Kitchen Have Yon tried the Hew FWLTEK m Wire Ilesh Skillel Lid CATCHES GREASE ? STEAM ESCAPES MEAT FRIES . f HOT STEAMS WASHES EASY RIGHT WITH YOUR DISHES 2 SIZES FOR ALL SKILLETS Deaf School To Graduate Eight Students Oregon State School for the Deaf will graduate eight students at its commencement exercises, at the school at 10:30 a.m., Satur day, May 3a The Rev. Dudley Strain of First Christian Church will deliver the address. Jacqueline Quiring of Salem is valedictorian of the class and Naomi Ross of Portland is salu tatorian. Other members of the class are Kenneth and Wallace Cojley, Toketee Falls; Rot Mc Cann, Baker; Phyllis Nelson, Troutdale; Carol Todd, Philo math; and William Walker, Rose burg. A 4-H style show and demon strations of other school activi ties will be a part of the public commencement program. An ex hibit of work done is the voca tional department will be on dis play on the main floor of the Administration Building. MAN LOSES TO BUTTON CALGARY (vP) Calgary Pow er Co. Ltd., largest supplier of electricity for Alberta will install an automatic system whereby nine southern Alberta dams and power plants will be controlled by a one-man push-button system. It used to take nine men to do the job. 4m CI I 3 -lb. Size -1.05 iy2-lb. Size 1.20 Mb. Size 1.10 m i m m.m 1 11 1 Load it! Laich Ii! Leave It! And Your Dishes Are Done! v L- ' 1 VTV any u ' Lead Class at Jacqueline Quiring (left), Salem, is valedictorian and Naomi Ross (right), Portland, is saluUtorian of the graduating class at Ore gon State School for the Deaf. Commencement is May 30. Seed Growers Unable to Get Price Supports LA GRANDE UP) Representa tives of grass seed growers in three counties telephoned Rep. Sam Coon Wednesday, protesting that they were unable to get sup n IM1 MCll Wonderful Shower Gilt! S3 it I A Beautiful Decorator'a .Piece In Glazed Ceramic An Excellent' Wedding Gift 4.10 jBlS V Deaf School port loans on 225,000 pounds of al ta fescue seed. They said they had understood their seed met government require ments, but learned too late that it didn't because it contained too much cheat grass seed. , The seed was grown in Uma tilla, Baker and Union counties. Italian tobacco shops often sell cigaret butts one or two at a time, ' nv o) - r 1 km$l&'iz Wedding Gifts! Shower Gifts! fin 1 1 m XL:-'?lK Dulles, Nehru HoldPrivate . -- -i ; Conference By SELIG HARRISON NEW DELHI. India Ur Sec- retary of State Dulles and Prime Minister Nehru sat down Wednes day night for. their first private talk on Asian and world problems, Authoritative sources said the Ko rean truce deadlock was topic No. l. Some 40 guests invited by Nehru to dinner in Dulles' honor discreet ly drifted away after the last course and left the two statesmen alone In Nehru's air-conditioned study to begin their discussions. They will met again Thursday for another private talk in an ef fort ' to come to common under standings on the positions of the two nations in a world made tense by East-West differences. The United States is the acknowledged leader of the Western powers. In dia seeks neutrality while calling i for Asian peace. Dulles and Harold Stassen for eign aid director, arrived in New Delhi Wednesday on a fact-finding tour of Middle East and South Asian countries. A half hour be fore their arrival, Indian security police arrested 200- Communists nn (? v u an, o GEInjm r 11 I aV" 20.pe Si Tria Sen a'e $6.95 v' - ... artemponf to stage an anti-Dulles demonstration near the nirport , The, Reds, who were tarrying black' flags and placard! saving "warmonger Dulles, goj back," were confined to prison! for sev eral hours and then were forced to walk 10 miles back to Hew Del hi through blazing heat and sting ing dust storms whipped by 52- mile-an-hour winds. I There was a disturbance also in Bombay. Fiye persons, Including a policeman, were injured in a police clash there with 200 Com munists marching, to a previously selected site where they intended to burn a portrait of the American secretary. The portrait fras torn in the struggle as demonstrators tried to beat off the police with sticks. Dulles and Stassen paid a 20- minute courtesy call on Nehru im mediately after their -arrival by plane from Dhalran, Saudi Arabia field headquarters of thi Arabian American Oil Company. I The main subject of conversa tion was 'scientific aspects of the fierce dust and sand storms now sweeping the region. The land around New Delhi is semi-desert The Americans laid wreath at the site of Mohandas! Gandhi's cremation. Then they , "conferred with Indiana financial land eco nomic experts: CALIFORNIA PLANTS PEAS SACRAMENTO, Calif. (JP) California's acreage 4t peas planted for freezing ias been steadily ; expanding ia recent years. The 1953 acreagd of 9,200 was a new record high.) o o 01)0 Vr -St. .re ""Mi Open Friday Highis 'Til 9 362 Siale x ATTENTION studeiits PAI1EIITS TEACHERS Look Your - i Be Well DRESSED GRADUATION DAY! AND DONT FORGET DAD In A Smartly Tailored NOW ON AT ll's i . . . 1 PRICE SLASHING RECORD BREAKING SALES FOR THE MONTH OF MAY Rea. $50. To $65. 100 Imported Loomed Wool Flannel 1 Navy Blue, jSilver Grey and Tan. Solid Colors and Splash "Weaves. Now Priced At Only $3950 w W Large Selection, All Sizes, One and Two Button Models. 1953 STYLES THAT ARE ALL THE RAGE. I ! . . Ilany Other TO CHOOSE FROM 1 In 100 Wool I Worsted Fabrics. New Patterns, Col ors, Weaves and Styles. All Sizes, Regulars, Shorts, Longs and Stouts. Values $45.00 to $75.00 One & Two Pants Suite NOW ON SALE AT i $3500 - $55 SPORT COATS & SLACKS 5 I Finest Quality Fabrics, Ex pertly Tailored New 1953 Styles, Patterns, Colors and Weaves At : reaf leduciions NEW FUR FELT STRAWS & PANAMAS JUST ARRIVED Fur Felts $5. to $7.50 Straws $1.95 to $2.95 Panamas 3.95 Open Friday Iliio 'Til -9 O'Clock CLOTHES SHOP 387 STATE ST. 2 Doors From Corner of liberty At Bos Stop III MS 4. t l