4 (Sc 2 Statesman. Salem, Ore- Thunu Aug. 23. 1853 THE VALLEY NEWS COLUMNS From The i Oregon. Statesman's Valley. Correspondents Valley Fishermen Score at Wickiup l naff I , r. , i J" f ! .1 k. 4 I"" - t MEHAMA The result of a weekend fishing trip to Wickiup Reservoir in Central Oregon are pie tared above. Wiiliani Keeneyj Jr Falls City; and Ray Roberts, Mehama, caught six German Brown and two Rainbow trout while trolling with a "Hot Shot" lore behind a Ford fender spoon. At left, the two largest German Browns, stretched oat on a page of The Oregon Statesman measured a little over 25 inches and weighed eight pounds . each. At right is Keener with the two large fish. Reception for Rev. Meyers Due Tonii 1H. B.Coleman To Head Polk Blood Program (Story also on page 1) DALLAS Henry B. Coleman of Dallas is the newly-appointed chairman of the Polk County Red Cross blood program, chap ter chairman Woodrow Jones announced Wednesday. Coleman succeeds J. N. Unless,, blood chairman for nearly two years. Jones said Coleman ac complished a great deal in re cruitment of donors and opera tion of bloodmobile visits. The blood unit is due at the Christian Church here Tuesday, Sept. 8, from 3-7 p.m. Friends and relatives of persons who have received transfusions are asked to recruit donors for replacement Concerning appointment of Mrs. F. M. Henderson as executive chairman, Jones said the chap ter office will remain at Dallas City HalL It will be open Mon day through Friday from 0 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 p.m. Mrs. Henderson will accept emergency telephone calls at her home here after 7:30 p.m. lit Statesman News Sjrvic CLEAR LAKE Elans were complete Wednesday lor the re ception which members of Clear Lake and Labish Evangelical Brethren Churches will hold from 8-10 p.m. Thursday foi the Rev. and Mrs. Lyman Meyer? and fam ily. It will be at the Labish Church. ! Greeting and Introducing guests will be Mrs. T. C Mason, Mrs. Arthur Sarensen, Mrs. Naortii Massee, Mrs. Delbert -Bair, Wilt ard Aker, Merle Reed, Mrs. Edna Kurth, and Mrs. Evelyn PearsaJL Mrs. Arthur Evans, Mbs Earl ine Gallihugh, Mrs. Fye Eoise, and Mrs. Bern ' -n Boise have been asked to pour. On the com xmlfee making general arrange ments are Mrs. Dale Boyd, Mrs. Lester Rose, Mrs. RobeH Massey, Mrs. George Tracy, find Mrs. Ethel Etinson. f Robert Massey will make the welcome speech for Clear Lake and Ed Boise for Lahish. Mrs. Oscar Bair and Miss Gaynelle Metheny will sing during the eve ning. I Of the wearers of glasses in the United States. 5fl4 females and 43.6 per cent male. i Guests Visit Turner Homes Statesman News Service TURNER-Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cook of Martinez, Calif., have been visiting his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George Brower. Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Brower of Modesto, Calif.; were to arrive Thursday to visit his parents the George Browers. Mrs. Rodger feeLorm, Rachel and Rodger Jr. of Seattle are vis iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Hogsed. Mr. and Mrs. John Regier are In Seattle to attend the wedding of their grandson. Dean Carter. Mr .and Mrs. Willard Smith, Modesto, Calif., have returned home after a visit with his par ents. Mr. and Mr Di,r Jn- sen. Both families went to The miles to visit Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kelly. GARDEN CLUB MEETS BROOKS-The Labish Meadows Garden Club met at the Walter Brutka home Tuesday. A dem onstration on corsage-making was given by Wanda Edlund of the Scotts Mills Garden Club. The next meeting will be held at West Salem on Aug. 27. Visitors were Mrs. Cleo Hicks, Mrs. William Egan. Mrs. Minni Tlnnieran mnii Miss Judith Brutka. Plambecks Home From Overseas; Visit at Mill City MILL CITY Recently returned from New Zealand, Dr. and Mrs. Hans Plambeck and children of Corvallis have spent a few days visiting his parents, Mr .and Mrs. John Plambeck of Mill City. Dr. Plambeck and family spent the past year af Chris tenure h, New Zealand, where he was on the faculty of Canterbury College. Dr. Plambeck will resume his duties this fall at Oregon State College, where he teaches in the sociology department Homecoming Set At Pedee Church Statesman News Berries PEDEE The Rev. Virgil Speece will speak at 11 a.m. Sun day for the service for homecom ing and fund rafting for the new EUB Church how under construc tion. A basket lunch will be served at 12:30 and the afternoon serv ice will start at 2:30 with the Rev. F. E. Fisher, Salem, his torian for the Oregon-Washington Conference of the EUB Church, giving the church his torv. All former naatora are a. Peciallv invited as well as all former residents. First Services Held at Methodist Chuch at Lyons Statesman News Service LYONS The Lyons Method ist Church held first services in the basement of the new chur:h which is under construction Sun day. Thanks was expressed to the Catholic parish of the commu nity for use of the Catholic haU since last December when the Methodist Church here burned down. The Rev. Harold E. Sheriff is the new Methodist minister. Lyons Club Plan For Flower Show . BtatesasM News Service LYONS - The Lyons Garden Club met at the home of Mrs. Raymond Branch In Mehama Tuesday with Mrs. Elmer Taylor as co-hostess. Plans were made for a fall flower show which will be held Tuesday, Sept. 18. Mrs. Raymond Branche was appointed general chairman. Mrs! John Neal and Mrs. Otto Weidman were in charge of a question and answer box- Guests were link. Harry Monroe, Meha ma, and Mrs. Fred Stienfelt, Lyons. Mrs. Steinfelt joined the Cluft. .... -, . : 'Muscular9 Valley Ulriefs VISIT VICTOR POINT VICTOR POINT Visiting here for a month with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. John J. Doerf ler is Mrs. Marvin Brunold, also her two daughters of Sacramento, California. They went to Tacoma last weekend and visited the Ernest Doerfler home. MOLALLA IOOF ELECTS SILVERTON Albert Dutton was elected noble grand; Ted Kayler, vice grand, and Frank Yannessa, secretary, of Molalla Lodge 184, IOOF at the annual picnic held in Coolidge & Mc Claine Park, Sunday, which 35 adults and IS children attended. Union Hill The Union Hill Grange will- meet Friday night The annual watermelon feed will be held following the juvenile and subordinate meetings. Willimina F. B. Lash is home from a Portland hospital where he was confined several weeks following an eye operation. Middle Grove August Otjen is convalescing at his home fol lowing major: surgery. Union Hill The Union Hill Womans Club will hold Its an nual family picnic Sunday at the Arthur Mulkey picnic grounds. In charge are Mrs. Peters, Mrs. Henry Tate, Mrs. W. J. Lensman and Mrs. W. M. Tate. WiUamina The death of Dave Meisner, formerly of Grand Ronde, was learned here this week. Funeral services will be held Thursday at Redding, Calif. Mt. Angel Virgil Gooley will be campaign chairman for the annual Community Chest drive in J Mt Angel, chest officials an nounced Tuesday. Gooley will meet with Mt Angel Community Chest directors in the City Hall Thursday at 8 p.m. Labish Center C onstance Weinman, director of Audio-Visual Aid for this Salem School Sys tem is spending this week in Seattle attending a television workshop. Pedte Walter Dalton, who suf fered a broken hip in an auto truck accident in Portland Satur day, was moved from a Portland hospital to the Good Samaritan hospital in Corvallis Tuesday. 1 Iff ': Promotion of City Gas Plant Plans Rebuked WASHINGToJ tiB Growing references to moter-e n g i n e! ctivities of e r i was "pro-noted Valley Births STAYTON To Mr. and Mrs. Albin Etzel, Stayton route 1, a son, Aug. 17, at Santiam Memor ial Hospital. f To Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Minden, Sublimity, a daughter, Aug. 14, at Santiam Memorial Hospital. SHIP RETURNS VETS SAN FRANCISCO (ffl The transport Gen. Nelson M. Walker brings 328 American prisoners of war home from Red Korean prison camps Sunday. The freedom ship, which also carries Marine and Army combat veterans for reassignment in the United States, is scheduled to dock at t Mason about 9 a. m. Spike Jones poselk for a "Man of Muscle" photo as proof of his physical . ability. His musical ability will be on display at the Capitol Theater Monday when he brings his 35-member "Musical Insanities" stage show for two performances, at 7.00 and 9:30. Reserved seats are now available at the Capitol Theater. Price Support Revision to Cut Payments WASHINGTON UP) The Agri culture Department Wednesday re vised its method; for computing price support payments to growers of sugar beets. It estimated the re vision will reduce payments an average of about 2V cents a ton on the estimated crop of 11,200,000 tons. ; For the 1953 and future crops there . will be a moving base for figuring the amount of sugar commercially-recoverable from beets. This replaces a fixed base which has been used in the past. Support payments to beet grow ers this year are expected to be about 28 million dollars. TALBOTT FLIES HOME LONDON m U. S. Secretary of Air Harold E. Talbott flew back to Washington Wednesday night after completing a three-day tour of American air bases in Britain. Wednesday at jja Power Commis sion hearing on applications to pipe natural gas to j the Pacific North west' ', ,; ""::' . J Attorneys for several groups in dicated they panned to make a determined effort to discount testi mony of Earl Porter, an engineer who said 12 Washington State cities authorized him to testify they want to build distribution systems if natural, gas isfbrought in. Since Porter! began testifying Tuesday, several Attorneys have tabbed as "promoter-engineers' those who persuade city officials to make pLansi to build and op erate municipal distribution sys tems. Engineering Porter is witl Porter. Barry and As so., of Batori Rouge, La., a con sultant engineering firm which surveyed potential gas markets in Washington an designed plans for the municipal jjdistribution system. He testified lover the protest' of George Meibirger, lawyer for wasmngion ua ana electric wo., which distributes manufactured gas in several of the cities men tioned by the i witness. Meiburger Kjoved to block the testimony on tie ground that Cen tralia and Chjehalis. which are served by Washington Gas and Electric, 'have not authorized Porter to say . they intend to con struct new distribution systems in competition with existing systems Discussion of abetters Hearing Examiner Glen R. Law admitted Portei's testimony after discussion of the city's interven tion in the easel and of letters and telegrams sent! by the cities to Porter and to attorneys represent inz them at the hearing. Lawyers for feveral groups, in cluding the principle applicants for the Northwest, questioned Porter on the adequacy of his market. or engineering feports and on his arrangements wjith city officials. Many Applicant! Service to several of the cities represented byjPorter is 'hot planned by applicants for pipe line construction licenses. The appli cants include Wstcoast Transmis sion Co. and Trans-Northwest Gas Co., both of wich would handle Canadian gas, and Pacific North west Pipeline Cd. which would sell gas from the Saf Juan Basin field in Colorado anqj New Mexico.. Porter testified on details of eight of the twelve projects be recommends. Hffl proposes that the cities pay, for thi projects by sell ing revenue fonos in, inese amounts: I Mt. Vernon, iapo.000; Anacortes, $75,000; Bucklef, $215,000; Cen tralia, $840,000; fhehalis, $625,000; Enumclaw, $75f000; MarysviUe $335,000: Moses Lake, $400,000; Quincy, $260,000; fTumwater, $523,- - Police Arrest rihan Reich Leader Pdrtv I. - - ' i N HAMBURG, Germany fa) Dr. Werner Neumann, a leader of the Nazi-like German Reich Party, was arrested Wednesday plight aft er he ignored a police warning not to take part in a political rally. Some 409 of his political follow ers fiUed k public hail With loud protests when police ordered the one-time Nazi bigwig to leave the platfflfaa. ... . ; j ; , 'Lel Naumann free." he crowd shouted. iWe want Naujnann." Nauinanh, political hope of his party I in the September) election, was akkedf by police officials earl ier not to Ippear because his politi cal enemies might cause irouLk Released later, ! Naumann calleu a mews eomerence ana saia a "misunderstanding arose because police advised party headquarters and not him 'personally that he should noi appear at the rally. ibep Mojved, 4 Left! Wool-less HELENA, Mont P) Montana transplanted a wild bighorn mountain Iram With curious re sults. jThel ram and IS Other big horn sheep were planted on an Eastei n Montana' ranch with a view to Restoring the breed in that r?gioh. .. ; i .f ' ;. .The rain associated with a group of? domestic sheep with these consequences: A rordan rancher! wondered' what 11 wool-less lambs in his herd vovl$ bring! on the market Sportsmen! wondered if this could be' the start of a new game spey cies. And? Montana state biolo gists planned to learn if the hy brid offspring would be sterile. 4 Ru$s Radio Has No Comnient LONDOM broadcast ment successful Premier Iran. The dio. Soviet if) ' Moscow Radio briefly and without com- fThursday the news of the royalist coup; against Mohammed Mossadegh of was on 1 report, quoting Tehran Ra- ercdited! to th$ official new agency Tass.l 1 j , I 000; Washoiigal, $345,000, and Win- lock, 1250.QD0. ! -'"hi The 12 cities would tap any pipe line authorized to bring gas to the P?cifid Northwest. Estimated max imum daily gas demand for .the group would be 14 million cubic feet Tlrefl of Painting? See falser Alumlnam Siding wRh Permanent Baked Eamel f lnislu j rree Estimates. ph. 2-S05S H) A 1 H Hi A I1I-.IL 'Wt-i i ' ' i l ' ..-! ' ;' I . j . I ; - I . Pack the Park Tonight : : (o) fy" r "- 1 i i CoUd) o)o DuQo i - 1 a : 1 . .- Li : - p7(3S (oo?L?obEaBDtib dd0y7 1 , -1 : ' m I i : i i1- II ! it C3 I Z(IdiT3dggddi BOOST THE SENATORS BERG'S MARKETS CAPITOL SHOPPING CENTER I KIlZEg (SOON OPENING) R. L. ELFSTROM tOOFING, PAINTING, FLOOR COVERING CONTRACTOR 260 S. Liborry-2-2493 "FILL THE PARK" PADE'S GROCERY & MKT. BEN O. PADE, PROP. 1244 $fat J-9135 : v: ; : ZOSEL TIRE CO. ' ' Chemeketa and High SUPPORT THE SENATORS "SEE THE SENATORS PLAY" DANA'S BOOTERY CAPITOLSHOPPING CENTER PAULUS BROS. PACKING COMPANY 14th and Oxford -Salem "SEE YOU ATiWATERS FIELD" I RUSS BONESTEELE STUDEBAKER fALES 1 SERVICE r PHOhl 3-9277 ORVAL'S liSED CARS" THE LOT VITrl THI- TURNTABLE ! "COME OUt AND WATCH. ' I THE LOCAL TEAM"