Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 4, 1954)
i i THE VALLEY; NEWS COLUMNS From The Oregon Statesmen's Volley Correspondent Sidney Group Slates ! Tuesday Meet JEFFERSON The Sidney Talbot Home Extension Unit will meet at 10:30 a.nt Tuesday, for an all-day meeting in the Talbot Community church basement The project, "Simple Home Re pairs", will be led- by Louise Ed awards and Anna jFrietag. Host esses, Irene Gilmpur and Doris Freeman, will serve dessert and beverage at noon, in addition to sack .-lunches brought by mem bers. Guests are always welcome The Jefferson (Home Extens ion Unit, also studying Simple - Home Repairs, will meet in the city hall Friday morning, Jan. 8, for its all-day meting beginning at 10:30. Patty Baraes and Mary Overholser will lead the project Members will bring sack lunches and coffee will b served by the hospitality committee, The regular meeting of the Christian Woman's Fellowship was postponed until Monday, Jan. 4, in the Christian Church parlors. Mrs. M. program leader and Mrs, Knight hostess. The Jefferson will meet in the . McGill will be Leta Grange Sets First Meet For Ankeny library, board library TufSr SUUflui New Serric ; JEFFERSON Ankeny grange will hold its first business meet ing of the new year, with new officers presiding Saturday night January 2, at 8:30 o'clock. ; The Money Makers 4-H live stock lub will meet Monday night after school at Don Robi son's home. ' A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Don Curtis in a Salem hospital Sunday, December 27, They now have two daughters and one son. Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Henion have moved from their acreage on Greens Bridge road to their house on Third street, formerly occu pied by the Al Whittle family. The Betha Able family ; has moved into the Frank Rehfeld house. ' Stephen, -year-old son of the Max DeVaneys, underwent an ap pendectomy at Lebanon hospital two days before Christmas. 1 Judge Rex Hartley win be ad vanced to the rank of Knight Commander of the Court of Hon or during investiture ceremonies in Portland Monday night i The award is in recognition of the yf TAUlUt aasa 1 Pj CUT 1. POOAH I MA. 22 AM. 304 1. 3- 4-171 8-20-55 MAY 22 AWE 22 AJNI23 JULYS ISO JULY 24 Aud 23 775 vawo AUC24 JOT. 22 if . ' Atcmrdinm tm tit Stan. To develop message for Monday, nod words corresponding to numbers ot your cjiac ptrmjign. SfT.2J OCT 23 14-24-51-57, I You 2 Don 3 C4M 4 Go S 7 Try t Luck's 10 With II 12 .13 14 15 EMllr U fUod 17 Or II Und - 30 To 21 'Writ 22 Overbear QuM 24 Suiin I 25 Surround 26 Social 27 For 28 Sowwt 29 Contottt 30 Friend (Good 31 Or 32 Door 33 Road 34 Wind 35 And ' 36 Noodi 37 Meert 33 Now 3 You 40 Buy 41 ftapey 42 Kmp 43 Lending 44 VnHs 45 Art 46 AHoto 47 An 4 Moke 49 Sovingi 41 Future 62 Guard 63 Plans 65No 66 Word 67 Your .63 Shop : 69 HooHH 70 Or 71 Conquor 72 Buying .73 All 74 Plans: , 75 Secret 7Wlin 77 Celebrating 71 Traveling 79 Insurance 50 Encouraging SO WondeVful 91 EteWem SI impO) 52 Tries V t2 Wane 53 Promioing s 33 Oi 54 Up 4 S4 Er S5 Ad.entoM 85 For 96 You - 86 Unftnighed 37 For ! 7 Now 51 Some 8- Lottor 39 Go1- 89 Poroonel 90 ButinoM lAdrene OCT 24 NOV 22 S.7-W-: NOV DEC a-d-B-eVw 24.! DCC JAN JAN 31 .to-5o49rOl to64-71 Ag races res. 14-tl-31-34rl day afternoon, January 5, instead of its regular date. Mrs. Guy Rol and is chairman; Mrs. V. E. Goin, secretary; and members, Mrs. Les Shields, Mrsj Hal Wyndjand Mrs. Leonard Mcpaw. J The Three Links club of j Mt Jefferson Rebekah lodge met Tuesday in the IOOF hall for a no-host dinner. Officers named by the Three Links Tuesday were Mrs. Olin Cox, president; Mrs. Walter Glasgow, vice president; Mrs. Harold MOrrissette, secre tary; Mrs. Curtis .Strode, trea surer. A card party will ( be held January 29, it was decided. ; Scio Buddies j Keep Togethe InMilitkrvLife Hop Growers1 jConference Set for 0SC By LILUE L. MAD SEN Farm Editor, The Statesman Hops, from market to culture. work accomplished by him in Sa-1 will be discused at the annual lem Scottish Rite circles. Valley Briefs WOODMEN ELECT Statesman News crrlee i SILVERTON Officers elected Wednesday night at the Modern Woodmen of America Lodge to serve during 1954, include con sul. Otto Dahl; advisor, John Thurman; clerk, J. N. Anund son; banker, S. M. McClung; es cort,' Cecil Cox; watchman, Les lie Brown; sentry, Paul Carstens; manager, Gus Herr, and auditor, Paul Carstens. Reds Harass French Patrols At Seno Base I ; i , ' ! - : ; " " ! .1 : ! li ; ' i u j, i h : ; 5 ' ! ' i .... i i u Especially designed for Tired Food 1 " fj F StotesiBcxB Salim Ortgoa, Monday, j January i. 1354 3 Facial Tisiu Kleenex Bill lali Oeanser Parade ietergeni Tide leiergent 300 Six 2 2 for Cans leiergent Stetrtman Newt Serrico SCIO Two former Sao school mates are teamed up azain in a school -armed forces history that might make the " Gold Dust Twins burn ,with envy. ' . I The pair is Sgt Ramon Jones and Charlie Martin who graduat ed from Scio High School in June 1949 where Martin played full back and Jonesf quarterback on the football team. They began their service ; car eers together i the following Oct 17, when they Iboth enlisted in the Marine Corps. They ; went through "bodfl camp together : and were home pn leave together and when theyj returned" to San Diego were coincidentally assign ed to Supply School at Camp Le Jeune, N. C. j 1 ; After completing the: school, though, their I paths separated. Martin going tq Korea and Jones remaining at LjeJeune. But their promotions continued to match and when Martin was discharged in San Franciico and Jones at LeJeune, bothj were staff ser geants, j j . After a quick taste of civilian life they re-enlsted and were as signed to Depot of Suplies at San Francisco. Six months later Jones . was ordered Ito Fleet Marine Force Pacific headquarters and Martin followed by a month. Now they have desks, one against the other in the supply office there, ; even closer than they had live years ago at Scio High, j NEW CLUB FORMS Stateiraaa News Service SWEGLE A new 4-H Club organized for Swegle School pu pils is the "Bird Feeders Club". Its officers are: president, Doug las Harner; vice president, Ron-. aid Alsman; secretary, Steven Holler; song leader. Gerald Gibb; reporter, Michael La Due. Lead ers are Mrs. Royal Wenig and Mrs. Harold Holler. The next reg ular meeting will be Jan. 6. PUMP SCHOOL SET Statesmaa Ntwi Scrrico JEFFERSON Earl Albright from the State Department of Ed ucation, vocational education, will be in Jefferson Monday and Tues day nights, January 4 and 5, to conduct a pump school.! The school will include pump classes and pump operation and should be of great interest to anyone, whether a fireman or not. Any one who can, is urged to attend. Allies Able to Stop Russia! Collins Says Past Commander Night Slated for Silverton's VFW Statesman Nrwi Srrrict SILVERTON The j Veterans of Foreign Wars will celebrate past commanders' night Wednes in honor of all former commanders- j I i Mark WentxeL present com mander, will be the official host and special guests will include Gary Hanson of Dallas, district officer, and Ron Dicken of Mo- lalla, senior tice commander of the department of Oregon. The first commander of Silverton post5 was the late Jerry DeSart. J i WASHINGTON " Gen. J, Lawton Collins declared Sunday night that NATO's military forces have grown strong enough to pre vent any sudden Soviet attack from overrunning Europe. j Collins. U.S. represenative of the NATO council, said the Western Allies have immediately ready to fight 16 to 18 divisions and about 2.000 combat planes, twice the air strength available three years ago. In addition, he said, the Ameri can Strategic Air Force could be brought into battle quickly, troops from Turkey and Greece could be used and the remainder of an 80 division NATO army is being built. I Interviewed on the NBC tele vision show "Meet the I Press; Collins refused to guess just how long a Russian onslaught could be halted or how much of Europe the Soviets might take before being stopped. But he said it was doubt ful that the Russians could reach the English Channel 1 Collins pictured NATO's build up as now reaching a "levelling off stage where the military ex perts are taking a new look to valuate the possible effects of new ! the weaPns 00 future planning. .Sportsmen Pilots Pick Scroggin Statnmaja Newt Sorrtco LEBANON i At the 'annual Portland election of officers for the Sportsmen Pilots of Oregon, Ralph Scroggin, Lebanon, was Denied president, marking the first time thd group was selected a president outside the metropoli tan area. . ; s j -" . The Lebanon organization, acti vated i 1949; is the only affiliate of the association. j Scroggins, a' member ' of the state board of aeronautics, has i long been identified with aviation on a local and state-wide basis. Michael Lynch 72, Silverton Resident, Dies Valley Briefs FALLS CITY Mft and Mrs. Fred Doerenhecker art the par ents of a 6 bound 10" ounce baby boy born Dee. 30 at Dallas Hos- .Statesman News Service SILVERTON Michael Lynch, 72. resident of this community for 11 years, died at his home here early Sunday morning. He had been in ill health for some time. i ! Bom in England Aug j 28, 1881, he is survived by his widow, Mrs. Catherine Lynch, Silverton; sons, Thomas and Albert Lynch, both of . Silverton, Michael, Lynch, Canby. Jack Lynch, Portland, and David Lynch, U. S. Army; daugh ters, Mrs. Anne Reed, Silverton, Mrs. Margaret Duminski, West Frankfort, I1L, and Mrs. Jane Cotter, Scholia, Ore.; three sis ters and one brother in England, and 14 grandchildren. 1 f uneral services win be an nounced later by the Ekman Fun eral Home, ! Hop Growers Conference to be held at Oregon State College Jan. 8. The hop industry has been rather a puzzle for the past few years. M. D. Thomas, agricultur al economist, a native of the Willamette Valley, is slated to -discuss the hop industry's fu ture at the conference. C. W. Paulus of the Williams and Hart Company, Salem, will talk on the "Hop Dealers' Dil emma." Along the same line will be the talk by D. C. Omans, man ager of the Independence Hop Growers, who will talk on some ways hop growers may receive help. Cultural practices including virus diseases, breeding trials, chemical defoliant experiments and reports on hop leaf tissue analyses will be given from men in the college including G. R. Hoerner, J. R. Keller, D. R. La li ning, Jr., and R. A. Magee. Two films will be shown! one on hop growing in the state of Washington and the other on hop growing in England. Market Inactive The hop market has remained rather inactive throughout the fall and early winter. Stocks of 953 crop hops remaining in first hands were relatively small with holders not pressing 'for sales. Brewers have been filling cur rent needs from stocks on hand and generally waiting until after the holidays and year-end in ventory time before adding more purchases. There have been a few sales of older hops for export pur poses. Inquiry on hops for fu ture delivery remained light but growers generally are holding for higher prices than currently offered. Growers have been of fered 38 cents per pound for regular seeded clusters and 40 cents for seedless clusters from the 1954 crop, the usual basis 6 per cent leaf and stem pick. At the close of the year the world's 1953 hops' crop was being estimated by the Foreign Agri cultural service at 11 million pounds under the 1952 produc tion. Total for 1953 was set at 132 million pounds. This esti mate represents the aggregate production in : Northern and Southern Hemisphere countries which before the war accounted for more than 94 per cent of the world's total. Carl R. Richardson, of thej USDA in Portland, explained the; reduction t as being due mainly to the smaller crops harvested; in the United States. Canada and the United Kingdom and Japan. A substantially lower crop is indicated also for Aus tralia. Competition Keen On the other hand, according to Richardson, much larger crops than a year ago are re ported for Germany, Ciechosla vskia, France, Belgium, Yugo slavia and Spain. These in creases are especially signifi cant from the point of view of the competition which American exporters must meet in the For eign markets during tbecurrent marketing sea-on. Competition for export outlets is predicted as being unusually keen for the season just starting. ' i he outstanding feature of the nation's export : trade . in hops during 1952-53 wfs the extraor dinarily large quantity sold in European markets, the total amounting to 4,854,000 pounds compared with : only 615,000 in the 1952-51 buy-ng season. The large purchase this past season reflected not only the poor crop harvested in Europe in 1952 but also such factors as a desire on the part of European brewers to build up reserve stocks. The sit uation is not the same 'in the present buying season. . J SAIGON, indochina W Communist-led Vietminh rebel forces are boldly harassing French pa trols fanning out from the French fortress at Seno in central Laos, fhe French : High Command an nounced Sunday. This is south of the region where the Vietminh eight days ago pushed elements of a division through Laos to the Thailand border, cut ting Indochina in two a its nar row waist : Up until now the Vietminh has been systematically avoiding con tact with French reconnaissance units operating north of Seno. A French armored patrol Sun day fell into a bloody Vietminh ambush on Colonial Route No. 13 between Savannaket and Thakhek. After a lively exchange of fire, in which both sides suffered losses, the French pulled back to Seno. De tails of the losses were not dis closed by the French command. 1 1n the same sector, paratrooper commandos raided a Vietminh vil lage, killing one rebel soldier and taking 17 prisoners. Small Encounters i Thirty miles south of Thak hek, numerous small encounters were reported as the French multi plied their effort to feel the strength of Vietminh positions and pinpoint them. I The French also reported live ly patrol activity in the mountain ous interior plateau of central Vie Nam, and in Cochinchina in the southern end of Indochina. ; I French planes bombarded Viet minh military installations on the Plaine des Jones, 60 miles west of Saigon, and hit at Viet minh troop units near Tayninh, 60 miles northwest of Saigon. , j Fall Into Ambush j ij In Cambodia, a military con- yoy carrying supplies between two I plantations fell into a Vietminh ambush about 90 miles northwest of Pnom Penh, the capital. Thej convoy suffered " some losses, ; the j French command said. j The rebels were reported step ping up their operations in Cam bodia's rich rice areas. King Noro fom Sihaiiouk returned to Pnom Penh from Battambang by special train to take command of a new campaign - to drive out Vietminh.' pguerrillas from the breadbasket area. V Continue Mop-up In northern Viet Nam, French and Vietnamese troops continued to push a, mop-up of Vietminh forces in another vital food area the south-eastern part of he .Red River Dela. I They clashed in a hand-to-hand battle with strong rebel forces. The fighting centered near Binh, 55 miles southeast of Hanoi. The French Union forces start ed the clean-up. called "Opera tion Falcon," on Dec. 13. They have swept through nearly 500 villages, digging the Vietminh out of underground hideouts and de stroying big supplies of rice, arms and ammunition. In, northwestern Indochina, French fighter planes and bomb ers kept up a steady hammering of Vietminh troops of the i"Iron Division" No. 316. j Reinforced by units from two other divisions, these Vietminh troops have been slowly closing in upon the French Union's fortified plain of Dien Bien Phu. French forces said a big rebel assault is momentarily expected. Oxydoll luz Soap Pouder While Magic Soap Joy Liquid Soap J9-ozx. j Pkg. i j 19-oz. i Pkg. ,.19-ox. Pkrj. i . 20V2-OX. i Pkg. I 23-ox. ; Pkg. 17-ox. Bottle 39c 1 ' 15c !' 29c 29c t 29c 25c 23c 73c i Budgets I ' - DALEWOOD Col AH-Vecetable Wrapped Cub 1-lb. carton OK3 Ord t S m-. -mm Raisins Seediest II JB Rice ! KELLOGG Corn Flakes KELLOGG RAISIN 2-lb. i Pkg. 28-ox. Pkg. 8-ox. Pkg. 10-ox. Pkg. 33c 37c 15c SUZANNA" GREEN LABEL fl I ' PI 3V24bi rancane i wur SPERRT j Pancake Flonr 45c Karo Syrup (NOB HILL Coffee 4-lb. Pkg. 12-ox. Pkg. 9V2-OX. ! Pkg. 19c 23c Bran Flakes! i Kellogg Pep i KELLOGG ! Rice Krispies KELLOGG Shredded Wheats 19c SWANSDOWN Cake Flour SOFTASILK j Cake Flour r4-ib. Pkg. 2s4-nL Pkg 53c 43c 43c 14b. Pkg. 85c Quart 49C U;69 2-lb. Pkg. 27c NABISCO Shredded Wheats 19c 22c 19c 13c 98c 97c Vhealies Grape Niils Sugar Sugar Sugar Brown or Powdered 12 ox. Pkg. 10 Vi ox. Pkg. lib. Pkg. Cane Beet 10 .u 10 Lb.. CAMPBELL'S j . Tomato Soup d 10c LALANI Pineapple Juice 4T 27c BATH'S Luncheon Meal 39c Swifi'sfrem 43c WHITE STAR Tuna Fish Z 33c BUMBLE BEE ! Tpna Fish d 31c LUNCH BOX : Sand. Spread 22Z 65c LUMBERJACK Maple Syrup It! 33c LUMBERJACK Haple Syrup 82c i- 1 1 l-lb. Clem 83c 87c 2-lb. Pkg. 2-lb. Con '1.65 1.73 -BoV 52c Iairway Coffee EDWARDS Coffee SNOWFLAKE J Crackers BUSY BAKER j Soda Crackers ' if Van ZeeiCheese KRAFT Velveeta Cheese it. 89c Mb. 29c 24b. Box Loaf 69C SUNNYBANK Margarine Sugar ci. Clorox 25 Lb. $4 C Bag .0J f I TORPEDO TUNA FISH Grated I No. j Can 190 4 DIE IX PLANE CRASH NEW ORLEANS U Four per sons were killed Sunday j when their light plane crashed into Lake Pontchartrain shortly after taking off from; New Orleans Airport RitesToday I For Salem Boy Private funeral services for Kenneth Allen Byers, 6-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth By. era, 195 Madison SU will be held today at 3:30 p.m. in the W. T. Rigdon Chapel with the Rev. Er nest P. Goulder officiating. ? He died at his home Saturday night following a lingering ill ness. Surviving are his parents. TERMITES . FREE INSPECTIONS Guaranteed Pest Control Service ta Se. 20th Ph. J-t781 GOODIE'S MARKET 1 1927 State St. OPEN EVENINGS rfIL 11 P. Mi I I -'li r s i m BOLOGNA Fresh Any Slxe Piece LB. Havel Oranges Orapeirui! Avocados Crisp, golden Boiling Beef Ground Beef ! i 1 f 1 C"il Shoulder ror oieaK Pork Chops cut Cut Center lb. lb. lb. 29c 39c 59c 89c 5 - 39c o Pork Liver f j Beef Liver sued Beef Kidnevs 1 s ! Calves Liver Sliced lb. 29c 00- ib. 25c SUced lb. 59c Florida Pinks Potatoes - i ' j .- I- Potatoes Pre-ripened U. S. No. 1 Economy U. S. No. 1 5c 23c 10 33c Each Each 'it i i.rt' POOCH DOG FOOD 25- 02 c 4 c, 35 PERK HORSEIIEAT J JL : I il I GOLDEIl JUICY Per Can PRICES EFFECTIVE TBBTJ WEDNESDAY. JANUARY STH 52c 30c lb. Mb 21 PIUJ. ! r .V.I j