Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1953)
!' " 1 i 4 I (3ec. 1 Statesman, Sclem, Orew Sunday,-Aug. SV.1S53 ! Premiers -;; ir,,-. j I. --I j , HORIZONTAL 50 Mountain pass j 51 Slendef fragment 52 On i ! sheltered aide : 1 53 Sidle f 55 Capabk of move ment I 57 Fish I of ; ! mackerel family 58 Excel I 59 Embark 60 Rest 1 61 Extrem i ity i 63 Wand j 64 Equally 66 Explainer 69 Fine f : muslin" 71 Soil I 734Winted shoes 1 75 Stag 76 Natural i height 79 Mocker SI Concord 84 Small j i birf 85 Evils j . 87 Born I 88 Control 90 Cap 91 Pour 93 Straight 95 Romantic tale '? 1 Bait for fish S Harbinger of ' spring 10 Oil- j bearing: ! rock IS Sea bird" 19 Drug plant 20 Speedily 21 Licit 22 Indiffer ent 23 Level 24 Journey 26 Frail 27 Tropical tree 2 Varnish irum 30 Distantly 32 Con structed ' 33 Hera in 35 East Indian palm : 36 Star flower 3ft Extent 41 Repeated ly, poetic 43 Corn mush (Mex.) 47 Cask 49 Branch of learning ; Answers Wo 1 cr on 1 I ' Ra e Struck B Dead Tree LINCOLN A U. 4- Corps f of Enneers employe fas injured ner here Saturday wen a barge he was working on struck a dead tree on the Wilfamettl River 4nd part of the tree fell in his nfcck and shoulders. : f- lee E. Sams, 59, off Bonneville, was taken to Salem Gjeneral rfos pital by Willamette fAmbulance Service after being brought to Lincoln on a tugboatf His condi tion was considered good Satur day night j S I The accident occurred about - noon approximately a mile north of this community which is same six miles northwest of Salem. .Salem first aidmen were called to the accident -aw hi .New la pregress . . : the biggest Shoe sale in Salem . . . Fa mous brands . . all at exactly 2 for the price of 1! v .. h i ij '-ea A ." ---'It-8.-'" i '!). X H -. i .4-. .."-.. r- .. " - ' - ' TT T- ' - " W I -ll rr- T I" W IllinJ-lfll'fllllllll 1" ZlZMTZZl T!" Zll ZMl "i Wi : iizr!:zzizzziii LJ m- 77?, 124- I I2S 12 U7 ! J ! 2 L 222; 432 yZ" i yy AA s 11 VAA ill I I aA I I I I tl I I 1 I ' -yl n ir rn i r mm " mmmmw III I I II II I Ml ? S V II i ; S, . --...-1,4. 96 Of great merit 97 Excite 99 Before 100 Small bed 101 Tree of the elm family 103 Fright 104 -Japanese porgy 105 Venturer 107 Enraged 108 Except 110 Godly person 112 Poem 114 Player on a musical 118 Anchor tackle 119 Roomy 123 Mend 124 Condition 127 Number of petals of violet 128 Auditory 129 Creed 130 Taut 131 Employer 132 Value 133 Sharp mountain spur 134 Celestial being 135 Plant organ 1 Float 2 Pot 3 Ramble 4 Somite 5 -Fleet 6 That which uncloses 7 Poet 8 Sherbet 9 Disre gard 10 Cut 11 Fowl 12 Seaweed 13 Hidden 14 Cum -. resin 15 Enrap tured 16 Function 17 Knots . of wool 18 Abound ing in : shade trees 25 Impru dent 28 Unusual 31 Gem 33 Un- . adorned 34 Short blast 36 Manila hemp 37 Shrub of : the Pacific coast , 38 Fear to Today's Puzzle on Page Portland Produce PORTLAND ( - Butterfat Tentative, subject to immediate change Premium quality, maxi mum to .35 to one per cent acidity, delivered in Portland, 68-71c lb; first quality 66-69c; second-quality 63-66C. Valley routes and country points 2 certs less. Butter Wholesale, f.o.b. bulk cubes to wholesalers Grade AA, 93 score, 66c lb; 92 score, 65c; B. 90 score, 63c; C, 89 score, 60c. Cheese Selling price to Portland wholesalers Oregon singles, 42 45c lb; Oregon 5-lb loaf 48 c. Eggs-To wholesalers Candled eggs containing no loss, cases in cluded, f.o.b. Portland A large, 67-63; A medium 65 -66 tt; A small 47 -48 B grade, large, 61-63 V. Eggs To retailers Grade AA, large, 74c: A large, 69-70c; AA medium, 69c; A medium,. 67-68c; A small, nominally 51-52c. Cartons 3 cents additionaL Live chickens No. -1 quality. f.oJ. plants Fryers, 2 -3 lbs, 31c, J-4 lbs, 31c; roasters, 4 Vt lbs, up 31c; heavy hens, all weights, 20-21c; light hens, all weights, 19c; old roosters 15-18c. Rabbits Average to 5 growers Live white, 4-5 lbs, 20-23c. 5-6 lbs, 18-22C; old does, 10-12c, few higher. Fresh dressed fryers to retailers. Wholesale dressed meats: Beef Steers, choice, 500-700 lbs, 41.00-44.00: good. 37.00-42.00; com mercial, 30.00-3700; Utility, 26.00- I I I- II If I IV I I pJuy the first pcrir at the recular iprice ... oet the second pair FREE - . fv - j- . . VERTICAL 40 Young "king of birds" 12 Toss Exagger ating 45 Dormouse 46 Wear away 43 Marshy meadow 50 Set 51 Biblical word 54 Sufficed 55 Tower on mosque 56 Go heavily 59 Thin portion of blood 60 Hush 62 Russian stockade 65 Outfit 67 Craze 6S Dis burden 70 Fury ,72 Commerce 74 Charge with gas 74 Leather thong 77 Crown 78 Biblical judge 80 Floor covering 82 Worker in rattan 83 Hard mineral 86 Extent 89 Fold 9t Annoy ' ance 94 Sister of Area 95 Kind 96 Imagina tive 98 Examine with care 100 Choral 102 Secular 104 Canopy over bed 105 Face of indicator 106 Calm 109 Prospect 111 Pointed 113 Jury 114 Smell 115 Poly nesian chestnut 116 Rough, hard - particle 1 IT Prong 119 Carol 120 River in France 121 Layer of iris 122 Slave 125 Favorite 126 Denary , Section 1. EYE STRAIN VANCOUVER (JPh-It has been found that the top fourth of the students in any class have the poorest vision of the whole class. Dr. Ian Evans of Price George said at the British Columbia Op tometrist Association's convention here. 32.00: commercial cows 23.00-27.00; utility, 22.00-26.00; canners-cutters, 20.00-24.00. Beef cuts (choice steers) Hind quarters, 53.00-57.00; rounds, 50.00; 57.00; full loins, trimmed, 70.00 78.00; triangles, 28.00-33.00; f o r e quarters, 30.00-35.00; chucks, 35.00 38.00; ribs, 49.00-53.00. Pork cuts Loins, choice, 8-12 lb, 57.00-60.00; shoulders. 16 lbs. 42.00 45.00; spareribs, 54.00-56.50; fresh hams. 10-14 lbs, 65.00-68.00; choice carcasses, 120-170 lbs, 37.00-39.00. Veal and calves flood-choice.-U weights, 33.00-40.00; commercial, 23.00-36.00. Lambs Choice-prime, 41.00-44.00; good 39.00-44.00. Wool Grease basis, Willamette Valley medium. 50-52c lb; Eastern Oregon fine and half blood, 55-62c; Willamette Valley lamb wool, 42c; 12-month wool, 45-50c. Country-dressed meats, f. o. b. Portland: Beef Cows, utility 24-26c lb; canners-cutters, 19-21c; shells down to 15c. Veal Top quality, lightweight, 30-32C; rough heavies. 24-28c. Hogs Lean blockers, 36-38c lb; sows, light 32-33C. Lambs Best. 38-40c lb. Mutton Best, 12-14c lb: cull- utility, 8-10c. Fresh Produce: Onions Calif. White Globe. 3.25- SJS0: 50 lb sacks of Wash. Yellows, med., 1.50-1.75; lge.. 1.25-1.40. , Potatoes Local Triumphs, lugs,! 130-1.75; Boardman Long Whites, No. 1A, 2.00-2.25: No. 2, 50-lb sack, 8045c; Wash. Russets 2.50-2.75; Wash. Long Whites. No. 1. 2.00- U2$. m Havy-U. S. No. 2 green alfalfa 29.00-30.00, delivered car and truck lots, f.o.b. Portland and Seattle. NATIVE RE-WEAVER .. : For n Oriental rug repairing . ! end Domestic rugs ANTIQUES JOHN KORENIAN Importer Oriental Rugs I j TeL 2-744 , ; . 1057 S. Commercial Wheat Prices Fall Sharply CHICAGO ai Those worrying people, the traders in wheat fu- ntres, xouna someuung new to trouble them this week and, as a result, wheat prices fell sharply. Traders substituted one worry for another bow farmers would vote in . the marketing quota ref erendum nsxt Friday instead of west Where the worry over stem bow much wheat might be dam aged by stem rust in the north- rust bad been bullish, that on (he marketing quota' was definitely bearish. The fall in wheat brought some sympathetic selling into other com modities, with two notable excep tions oats and lard. After showing a nervous tone all week, wheat went into a tailspin Friday add wound up the week Vh-Vtt lower. Corn was 2-2 lower, oats 4-lV4 higher, rye 3V4 4Vi lower, soybeans 3-44 lower anc lard 27 to 80 cents a hundred pounds higher, t Strikes Still Cripple French Travel Sendee PARIS on France floundered Saturday through a continued strike in government-owned public services which stranded hundreds of American, British and other for eign tourists in Paris and other vacation spots. Many of the workers who walked out Friday were back on the job Saturday, but 'the biggest head ache was in the railroads, where operations were still spasmodic. Uncertainty was so great that sleeping car reservations were re fused, and the railway ticket of fices frankly said they had no idea whether any given train would move. Trains Uncertain "We just canU find out which trains will run or how far they'll get." one travel agent said. "It's still up in the air." The situation seemed to be im prt ving Saturday night as more and more trains all of them overcrowded left terminal points. By Sunday, almost normal serv ice was expected. Saturday, however, was a trial for residents and tourists alike. The American Express Company managed after an all-night scram ble to charter enough busses to get 332 passengers from Paris to Le Havre for the sailing Saturday of the British liner Caronia. The company was trying to as semble another bus fleet to bring 580 passengers from Cherbourg Monday, when another British liner, the Queen Elizabeth, will ar rive from New York. Many Still Striking French officials said it was dif ficult to say how many of Friday's two million strikers were still out but that the figure was over 500, 000. So far. Paris had no food short age, although fruits and vegetables available at the central market were 700 tons below normal. A 24-hour mine strike almost completely closed the nation's coal fields, with the walkout reported 80 per cent effective. Garbage col lection was only spotty in Paris, where many municipal workers still stayed off the job. Funeral parlors opened, how ever, and burial processions were seen. The four-day nationwide postal, telegraph and telephone strike con tinued, and the government an nounced plans for using the army to collect letters from jammed mail boxes. Harpers Ferry Planned f or U. S. Shrine HARPER FERRY, W. Va. GT) This historic old town, where John Brown carved himself a hunk of infamy with a daring raid on the federal arsenal in 1859, is becoming a national shrine The National I Park Service is waiting for Maryland to donate 700 acres of land on its side of the Potomac River. Recently West Virginia turned over a well- worn deed for many of the sites which figured in history. Assistant Secretary of the In terior Orne Lewis said the gov ernment would restore many old houses and buildings so that Harper's Ferry may portray the era of its greatest importance. Stock Market Starts Climb NEW YORK The stock market started the traditionally bullish month of August with a rise this week. In most recent 1 years, stocks When Commodore Perry land ed in Japan in 1853. he found that the villagers at Kurihama, 3 miles south of Tokyo, were terrified at the black smoke pouring from the funnels of his' gunboats. ! . r FOR SALE Es Seattle . Thwarts Morse Talk Br A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Correspondent WASHINGTON Sen.- Wayne Morse is announcing no plansto visit Oregon,' now that Congress . I is in adjourn ment Most of his c o 1 leagues bit the trial home ward as soon if not sooner as the Oregon Inde pendent quit talking late last Monday night and the first I session of the L. 83rd Con gress ended. - Sen. Guy Cordon, working on plana for two excursions to for eign soil that may take him 'round-the-world during the next several months, has no extensive plana for handshaking in Oregon either. Cordon flew to Portland Saturday for the Republican fund raising dinner, but expects to re turn immediately to Washington. D. C. Cordon's ventures abroad will be in the Belgian Congo on an atomic energy committee expedi tion for uranium and in the 3,-000-mile long chain of Pacific is lands held by America in trus teeship. The latter trip will be for the purpose of drafting or ganic legislation to spell out rights and privileges in law for the peoples in the trust territor ies. Oregon's four, congressmen, all Republicans, laid no plans for overseas junkets during the con gressional recess. They expect to be hard at work on the service club luncheon circuit for the next few months in their home dis tricts, telling their version of what was accomplished under the new Eisenhower regime. Sen.: Morse, meanwhile, is ap plying the best and most pleasant remedy he knows for releasing the tensions that mount on Cap itol Hill. He is training a three year old colt to be a roadster, for horse show purposes, at a nearby racetrack. When President Eisenhower flew to Seattle last Monday for the governor's conference, he made a last-minute offer of a ride home to the Washington state congressional delegation. All but one accepted, for varying reasons. Rep. Walt Horan of Wenatchee figured it would be a grand op portunity to fill Ike's ear about a pet bill he has been pushing in the House. But here is what hap pened: Eisenhower drummed up a round of his favorite indoor di version, bridge. Ike and Sen. War ren G. Magnuson (D-Wash.) took on Sherman Adams, the Dresi dent's assistant, and Secretary of the Treasury George Humphrey. Round and round it went with Adams and Humphrey snowing under Eisenhower and Magnu son. After trading off partners with other congressmen on the plane, it came Horan's turn to be the president's partner. Obviously jittery, "Horan flubbed right and left at the expense of his part ner. Result: no opportunity to talk about Horan's pet project. Whether it was calculated or not no one knows but Eisen hower's invitation to Magnuson and Sen. Henry M. Jackson help ed pull the rug out from under a possible all-night senate talka thon against the' administra tion's electric power programs, j Morse dropped the clue to this in his own adjournment night or ation, saying he had met with a ' number of other liberals some weeks earlier to plan a concerted speechmaking attack. He was to lead off, he said, following which the others would tee off in their own words to dramatize the seri ousness of natural resource pol icy. ; The whole effort was to cen ter around a bill introduced the last day by Jackson, with the co sponsorship of Morse and 16 oth ers. The bill, would prevent the Federal Power Commission from giving up Hells Canyon to Idaho Power, without the sanction of Congress. Jackson had a long prepared speech ready to go when the White House called with the offer of the plane ride. Magnuson, too, dropped his speech plans. Other senators found other matters to attend to at .the last moment in the rush to get out of town. And Wayne Morse was left virtually alone with a 41-page speech. So instead of delivering it alt much of it , was entered in the record so the adjournment hour would not be delayed at least until sunrise, as might have happened. have staged a rally in August so the market is in the right groove. The -move ahead wasn't very great The market, however, dis played all the earmarks of' want ing to get ahead. Perhaps the greatest drag on bullish sentiment was a lurking feeling that an economic adjust ment is due. This is the second week in the shift from a fighting war to a hot peace. The bottom hasn't fallen out of business yet Some contend it won't Others sit with their fingers crossed, afraid to move. Valley Dislribulors PEL 34333 Trip ! 1 vTeacher Wins Damages in mmmmmmmmimm 1 1 n i i mm : mm -.7.-;! n k. ' V . m v.- I V mm v SAN FRANCISCO California's ' munist sympathies was returned by a San Francisco jury in favor of Misa Fir Braner, 29 (right), 1 San Lorenzo, Calif., schoolteacher. The Jury held' that James Tarantlno (center), Los Angeles gossip . magazine publisher, slandered Miss Bruner by calling ber a 'reported Confnmoist er Communist sympathizer In radio broadcasts nearly two years ago. Tarantlno was ordered to pay S25J00O, radio 1 station KYA of San Francisco, 1 photo to The Statesman.) Pretty and a Heroine 1 - , 1 1 ' --. i .. WASHINGTON Marine SUff Sergeant Barbara O. Barnwell, a pretty blonde who calls Kansas City, Mo., her home, receives the Navy-Marine Corps medal for heroism from Gen. Lemuel C. Shep herd Jr., Marine Corps commandant First woman, ever to win this decoration, she saved a man's life in the Atlantic last summer off Camp Lejeuene, N. C. Sgt-Barnwell has been in the Marines since May, 1949, and Is now stationed at Fort Schuyler, N. Y. In World War II there were about 50,000 battle deaths of Americans in the Pacific area. t Distinction Means... . . . Your firm is well represented through , its printed forms. Each piece of printed material bearing your name is represent ing and selling your firm. Why not be well represented through distinctive, impressive business cards, letterheads, and other printed forms. Distinction Serves You (Z TWO THINGS NECESSARY FOR ; FINE PRINTING AND ENGRAVING Statesman Publishing o , CREATORS 215 $. Commercial $. V 4 ' mf i k. w . 4 ' e -mW first verdict awarding $55,000 damages for falie implication of Com- $25,000 and KYA manager, IL G. . .1 XT' Vji.r-: li . , .....-- Undulant fever in man may be caused by the same germs that cause Bang's disease in cattle. . . The Men who -the utmost pains isf act ion for which! we arl When ANO PRODUCERS OF FINE . r Slcmcmr Suit - - - a - Vv . r V y t-1 : Cr 4 , uiiOse Fefnhead (ft)i 83,000. (AT Wire- St 1.1 n i :i I . II I Salem Market Quotations (Asf it yesterday) BCTTEKFA Premium Nqt ... BUTTER Wholesale Retail -... ECJOS (B (Wholeu mo 1 ce Larce AA Larue A ... Mertium A, Medium A Pupet POTJLTRV Colored Licinorn nana .t Colored Friers . uib noosieia Roaster ... 3 The met of armadUJos is said to, taste ke pork. mfJXXmf ! (il TW BOTM Director, 4 fvnd hm 4fdre4 fmri1 at IS cmmH wt share 9r Xmj 2 IvTJ l.WeoUi rcer tmy 31, it, fipelst in plinting and engraving are craftsmen In the field take I guarantee your sat- with the hed prod mis uct. Your j 'I Mil III III li t . II i , .70 zztrl - ::!! ':. utlat) ii . tf prtcee ranir (from j fa .over Duyinf price) I ,81 S tdU-s ....a j -i-i J 4-4 w .. -n- ;: 1 IJrtSTo. I STOCK FUND Mmmmrn mmammt rilHllSl' J CilXlli. ail- i i i Robjert M. Stephenson .797 N.pVinter Salem, Ore. BMMM m means. .. ' h ! satisfaction with ur quality goal con st a intly srr trrving. printing is f oui problem; see us. Dividends 4 PRINTING I f I I f Phlne 2-244! W I