The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 03, 1954, Page 15, Image 15

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Valley News
Statesman News Service
Marion County
Farmers Union
Meeting Slated
- fUtexmaa New ferric
SUBLIMITY-Mehama and Sub-
limitv Farnvn ITninn Locals will
be hosts to the Marion County I ready owned by the troop.
Scouts Benefit
From Pie Social
At Hazel Green
Statesman, New Service ;
HAZEL GREEN More than
$28 was ! added to the treasury
of Boy Scout Troop 57 of Hazel
Green following a pie social Sat
urday night The money is to
be used to buy new equipment
and to waterproof the tents al-
Novitiate Has
$130,000 in
ins Fund
Fanners Union's quarterly meeting
at 10:30 a.m. Saturday in the new
grade school building in north
Stayton on the Stayton-Sublimity
highway. .
A panel discussion on agriculture
In Marion County will be held, ac:
cording to Roy Rutschman, coun
ty chairman. ,
On the panel will be Harley Lib-
by of Marion, Matt Martin of the 1k i V
f r j ,i . i l It en. 10.
aanuam VO-op ana )oan UEnaan,
Mt. Angel. '
Lienhart will report on his recen)
trip to a national dairy conference
at Madison, Wis. A representative
of the Hells Canyon Dam Associa
tion will speak, j '
Resolutions to be presented to
the state convention will be due at
this meeting. I
Members attending Saturday are
to bring a hot dish, salad or des
sert. !
Warren Zielinski was chosen
to represent the Silver Falls dis
trict on Governor's Day, Feb. 8,
during Scout Week. Hazel Green
was awarded the honor of send
ing a delegate to represent the
district because of the interest
shown in scouting and its attend
ance record.
The district Court of Honor
will be held at Hazel Green on
LEADS HONOR BOLL
ST. PAUL-Charles Merten, a
junior in St Paul Union High
School, led the third six week honor
roll, with a 1.4 scholastic average.
He has been on the honor rolLeach
of the three six-weeks periods and
has, led the past two.
Valley
Briefs
Utesmaa Newt Service
St. Paul Abbot Damian Jentges
.of Mt Angel Seminary will address
Knights of Columbus here at S p.m.
Wednesday. He will tell of. his re
cent trip to Europe. Names; of
candidates for . KC membership
will be read. Initiation for the new
"memom is tentatively set for
ounaay, r eo. zi. j
t
Pratam Mrs. H. D. LangiUe
left for Hawaii Sunday to visit
her son and family for several
months. i
Sheridan Heavy snow caused 75
feet of the roof at the McCormick
Lumber and Mfg. j Co. to fall in
last week.
Spanish War
Organizations
Seat Officers
Statesman News Service
ALBANY Mrs. Frances Sanders
was installed president of Phillips
Auxiliary No. 2, United Spanish
War Veterans, Sunday at a. joint
installation service with Camp
Phillips.'! Mrs. Besse Sutton, de
partment president, installed the
auxiliary officers, with R. A. Bu
chanan, Eugene, department com'
mander.! installing the officers of
the camp. Mrs. Sanders succeeds
Mrs. Frank Pliska as president
Other auxiliary officers were
Mrs. Floy Ward senior vice; Mrs.
W. J. Stockholm junior vice; Mrs.
Charlie Woodruff, chaplain; Mrs.
I. R. Reynolds, patriotic instruc
tor; Mrs. P. O. Urban, historian;
Mrs. J. B. Davis, conductor; Mrs.
Frank Pliska, assistant conductor;
Mrs. Ola Stellmacher, guard, and
Mrs. Anna Musselman, assistant
guard, ji
Appointive officers installed
were Mrs. Anne Lake, secretary;
Mrs. Georgia Correll, treasurer;
and Mrs. Alice Pilcher, musician
Mrs. Lake is commencing her
eleventh year as secretary of
Phillips auxiliary, while Mrs. Cor
rell is commencing her ninth con
secutive, term, but she had served
three previous administrations in
earlier years.
Commander Buchanan an
nounced the date for the 1934 con
vention which will be held in Eu
gene with Gen. Lawton Camp and
auxiliary as host, for July 18-21.
past
j Statesman Kewi Service
SHERIDAN Funds for improv
ing the Jesuit Novitiate near Sheri
dan have reached the 1130,000
mark. Father Daniel Lyons re
ported Monday. I
Goal is $330,000 of which $300,000
will be used to construct aj new
wing. Balance for proposed remod
eling of the present building.!
Construction of the new wire is
tbe first goal. Father Lyon said,
with construction to start late this
summer or in 1955.
Contributions during the
month totaled $25,000 and came
mostly from Oregon, Washington,
Idaho and Montana. A large cam
paign for funds will get underway
in Spokane, Wash., next month,
Father I .von said. . ' i
The new wing will i be three
stories with dining room and kitch
en facilities for 200 on the main
floor living quarters and class
rooms above.
The Novitiate now has an enroll
ment of 130 trainees studying for
the priesthood. The present build-
inc at the Novitiate is considered
the largest structure in Yamhill
County.
Postmaster
iV i
Shipments of
LiiLrRise
Name Leader
For Polk Co
Heart Drive
DALLAS Walter Craven of the
Dallas City Bank was named this
week to head the Polk County cam
paign for the Oregon Heart 'Asso
ciation's 1954 fund drive. Craven's
appointment was announced by
James F. Miller, state chairman.
Quota for Polk County is $500,
while the goal for the entire; state
is $25,000, Miller said. Most of
the funds contributed will be re
tained by the state and local ;units,
it was pointed out j
The funds aid programs of re
search, education and community
service aimed at prevention and
treatment of diseases of the (heart
and ; circulatory system, including
rheumatic fever, a leading cause
of Cardiac ailments among crm-
dren. -
RICKREALL R. V. . Carleson
(above), who has been recom
mended for postmaster at Rick-
. realL
R. V. Carleson
Waits Senate
Confirmation
Statesman Newt Service
RICKREALL Senate approv
al is pending for R. V. Carleson
who has been recommended by
Rep. Walter Norblad for the posi
tion of postmaster at Rickreall.
Carleson's recommendation, an
nounced ?.st week, came after the
Polk County Republican Central
Committee favored him for the
post
The Rickreall office is now
headed by Kenneth Farrens, act
ing postmaster since the retire
ment of Mrs. . w. v. Rowell two
ears ago. The office is third class,
with some clerical help allowed.
Carleson and Farrens: were
rated in the top three of the civ
il service eligible list
PORTLAND UB The Douglas
fir belt shipped out 11.7 per cent
more, lumber by ocean-going
freighters in the past year, the
Pacific Lumber Inspection Bu
reau Inc., reported Monday. i j
The total from ports in North
ern California, Oregon, Washing
ton and British Columbia was
slightly more ' than 3 V billion
board feet The total in 1952 was
slightly over three billion feet i
Northern California made the
biggest gain 105 per cent al
though the total was less than 94
million board feet, a small part
of the region s output ,1
British Columbia gained 21.2 per
cent, much of it because of an in
crease in shipments to the East
Coast of the United States. The
British Columbia total was 1,391,
664,206 feet, the largest share of
the shipments.
Western Washington . gained 4.1
per cent, much of it because of
shipments for the armed forces
from Grays Harbor and Willapa
Harbor. The Washington total was
703,860,563 feet; Oregoff was down
2 per cent, shipments totalling 1,
238,454,762 feet
U.S. Seizes
$261,826 on
Way to China,
SAN FRANCISCO (JP) The
United States has seized $261,828 in
cash . and negotiable paper con
signed to persons in Communist
China in the pasfseven week, a
Treasury Department spokesman
reported Monday. y
Government officials said proses
cution of the American Chinese
who tried to send these assets to
Red China is being considered by
the U.S. attorney. ;
The contraband came to San
Francisco by airmail for transship
ment by air to Hong Kong, from
which it was intended to be de
livered eventually to Red China.
Willamina Neal Mishler re- J Mill i Worker '
"crived a painful leg injury this-.
week when a .45 revolver accident-, SllDS. Drawn i f
ly discharged while he was remov-1 a ' ;
uvg it from the holster. The bullet IntO Etler SflW
missed the bone, inflicting only a O
flesh wound.
i
Clear Lake A no-host dinner at
6:30 p. m. will precede the regular
community club meeting on Feb. 5
at the schoolhouse. Those in
charge of the dinner are Mrs. Vir
g'l Hulser, Mrs. Vane Boynton,
and Mrs. Lawrence Bonn. There is
no charge, but donations will be
accepted. A program will follow,
and arranging it are Mrs. John
Guy, Mrs. Michael DosdalL and
Virgil Hulser. I
Willamina Bill Denton caught
his arm in the edger at the Willa
mina Lumber Company sawmill
and was taken to a Portland hospi
tal where he will be confined at
least a month. No bones were brok
en but the arm was badly mangled.
Sihrerton The Choir of the West,
idely-known choir j from Pacific
Lutheran College at Parkland.
Wash., will appear in concert at
tlie Eugene Field Auditorium at
Silverton on April 9. It is being
sponsored here by the three Lu- j
theran "Churches, Immanuel, Cal
vary and Trinity. ; . '
Pratum Betty Harlor, grand
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A.
Bowen of Pratum. graduated Tues
day from Pacific University at
Forest Grove. She has accepted a
position at Hillsboro where she now
is teaching- in the sixth grade.
1 Qainaby Keizer Farmers Union
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p. m.
ct Quinaby Hall. Election of dele
gates to the state convention will
be held. .
Pringle The Pringle Women's
Club will meet Wednesday at the
club house with Mrs. F. R. dark
and Mrs. Charles Grabenhorst as
hostesses.
Willamina Returning aboard
the aircraft carrier USS Kearsarge
from a tour of duty in the Far
East was Richard J. Moroney,
electronics technician second class,
son of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Moroney
cf Willamina. : r .-
.: Hitbbartl-The University 'of Ore
j gon 61-member band will present
Ji program at North Marion Union
' fligh School Thursday at S p. m.
The concert is being given -as a
r benefit by the North Marion Cbor
1 us and Band Parents' Club who
will provide the members of the
band with dinner preceding the
concert. . ,
Sheridan Merrill Kent Haddon,
19, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E.
Haddon of Sheridan, is completing
basic training at Lackland Air
Force Base near San Antonio, Tex.
: V -
: WiTlamiwa Mrs. Ed Moehlmann
is in a McMinnville hospital for
treatmerit, and Mrs. Carl Stros-
chine is in a McMinnville hospital
with pneumonia.
Labish Center The Textile
: Painting Class of the Home Eco
: nomics Club will meet Thursday at
I p. m. in the church basement.
Twins Arrive,
Win Dallas
Baby Derby
Statesman Newt Servle;
DALLAS Twin girls copped the
final prizes in the 1953 Dallas
Baby Derby Tuesday. I
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hilde
brand of DaUas are parents f
the twins, first born here! this
year. They were born at Bartell
Hospital. ' .
Linda Sue weighed six pounds,
four ounces; her twin sister.
Lora Ann, seven pounds j eight
Their numerous gifts
Woodburn P-TA
Will Observe I
Statesman in Service
SWEET HOME A Sweet Home t onnces
man was fatally injured when he i from Dallas merchants include a
slipped and was drawn into an record player, and six-months
edger saw at the Willamette Valley i stndio portraits. j
Lumber mill at Foster. The new twins have a sister.
Dead is James E. Coffman, Laveda, 5. They also have twin
route l; who had worked for the brothers,. Dan-ell and Dale, age
lumoer company since 1947, com- . j
imr here from Oklahoma. i
Surviving are his wife, Helen;
children, Wanda and Leroy at
home, Mrs. Billy McCowan, Val-
setz, and Mrs. J. B. Aatchley, i
Sweet Home. i y,
Services are pending, at Huston j r OlllKlerS UaV
Mortuary here. . '
Statesman News Senriet
! WOODBURN The Woodburn
! P-TA will observe Founders' Day
at its meeting Thursday evening.
The program will be at the Wash
ington school and Will feature
the founding .and history of
Woodburn's P-TA, according to
Mrs. Ralph Pickering, president
To aid in perpetuating the
work of the organization, la gift
offering will be taken
Fourth grade mother? will
serve refreshments. The serving
committee include Mrs. Robert
Ritter, Mrs. Edward Heidcn, Mrs.
David Cavett, and Mrs. Paul Ed
wnrrlt
Rabv sittinfi is provided! at the
school
Valley
Obituaries
II : I
Mrs. Nellie Spencer
WILLAMINA Mrs. Nellie Spen
cer, formerly of Willamina. died
last week in Portland where she
had been living the . past year.
Burial will be in Kansas. Survivors
include a grandson, E. A. Spencer
of Willamina.
Emerson Infant
SHERIDAN Graveside services
were held at St James Cemetery,
McMinnville, for the infant son of
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Emerson of
Sheridan.
Mrs. Veda M. DeLetts
ALBANY Funeral services
will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday
at the Fortmiller -Fredericksen
chapel here for Mrs. Veda M. De
Letts, 53, who died Saturday.
The Rev. L. F. Pounds will of
ficiate,1 and burial will be in
Riverside Cemetery.
Mrs.f! DeLetts was born Feb.
28, 1900, at Newberg. On April
13, 1947, she was married to
Harold DeLetts at Reno, Nev.
They Came to Albany six years
lah Wi wi ---'f---- i
A daughter, to Mr. and Mrs. Al
CnhmlrH Ml 4n"pl ' .Ian
Mrs. wcbetts was employed asffua c;,vnHnn Hnsnita
a real estate ana insurance sales
woman here, and later was rep
resentative for Dunn & Brad
street I She was a past president
of the? VFW auxiliary.
Charles Lee
ALBANY Charles Lester Lee,
67, Crawfordsville, died in an
Albany hospital Saturday." Serv
ices, under direction of the Fish
er Funeral Home, will be held
from the Crawfordsville Method
ist church at 2 p.m. Tuesday.
Lee was born July 1, 1886, at
Tipton, Mo. On August 9, 1919,
he married Ufartha J, Lily, who
survives.
GhafodShin
Smarting misery, amazingly relieved J
wnra meoicated Kennoi ru a ta
Uciii applied to chafed akin.
Lubricates, medirates.- helps to heal.
Bats t4er skin wh miM Resinel Sea.
nEsinoLOTo
Valley Births
SUtesman News Service
ALBANY To Mr. and Mrs. Da
vid Bradley, Jefferson, a son, Jan.
31 : at Albanv General Hospital.
SHERIDAN Mr. and Mrsi W. M.
Keffer. Portland, are: the parents
of a son. born Jan. 27 in Portland
Mr and Mrs. W. A.; Williams of
Sheridan are grandparents.
SILVERTON A son, to Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Crites, Silvertonj Hospi
tal. Jan. 29.
A son. to Mr. and Mrs, .sUeorge
30, at
30, at
bert Jaerl. Silverton. Jan
the Silverton Hospital.
A daughter, to Mr. and Mrs. Ru
dolph Dettwyler. Silverton, Jan.
31, at the Silverton HospHaL
A son, to Mr. and Mrs.
Giberson, Molalla. Feb. 1,
Silverton Hospital, v
Joseph
at the
Stotaoncnv Salem, Onu 'Wt Ft& S. lSS4 Sc D 5
Vets Offered
Basin Farms
FireDamases
S.Salem Home
Statesman News Service '
SOUTH SALEM Fire extensive
ly damaged the Charles D. Carver
residence, 1183 Albert Dr. Monday.
The fire started in a rear bed
room while no one was at home.
Cause was not determined. Dam
age, which may exceed $3,000, was
reported covered by insurance.
Liberty-Salem Heights firemen
answered the alarm.
Syria Army
Attacks Rebels
BEIRUT, Lebanon in Reports
from Damascus said Monday Syr
ian Army artillery has been pound-
ing 18 villages of revolting Druse
tribesmen, levelling three of them.
Tough censorship has reduced
the flow of news from Syria to a
trickle since President Adib Shis
henkly : clamped martial law on
trouble 1 spots Thursday to stamp
out attempts to overthrow his re
gime. ; ! !
He arrested 12 opposition lead
err . ccused of "openly calling for j
mutiny and disturbance." In ad
dition, former President Machem
Bey el Attassi was placed under
house arrest.
The crackdown on the tradition
ally independent-minded Druse re
ligious sect appeared to center
around their mountain village fast
ness of Southern Syria.
A well informed source said the
artillery had practically wiped out
the village of Araman. However,
Sliishenkly's martial law proclama
tion indicated trouble spots extend
ing up the western side of the
country.
GOP to Wage
Costly Drive
WASHINGTON Ml - A high
ranking Republican source said
Monday night his party plans to
spend "way more" this year than
it did in 1950. the last off-year
congressional election, in an effort
to retain control of Congress.
"It might even go as high as
twice as much," said the source,
who asked not to be identified.
The 1950 budget called for spend
ing $',900,000 on the Senate and
House campaigns as well as or
expenses of the GOPNational
Committee. fJ ;
The source said the party knows
it is in "for a heUf of a fight" in
seeking to retain its border-line
control of botlf houses of Congress.
;
WASHINGTON Ml The Rec
lamation Bureau announced Mon
day it is offering 30 full-time farm
units on the Columbia Basin proj
ect in Washington for sale to vet
erans unless they are all claimed
by ' exchange i applicants under a
1953 law.
'The farms total 2.064 irrigable
acres in the Quincy-Columbia Bas
in Irrigation ! District in Grant
County, and are located about 10
to 20 miles south of Quincy.
They range in size from 47 A to
141.7 , irrigable acres and vary , in
price from $817 to $3,929, -
Veterans may file applications
between Feb. 5 and March 22. Ap
plication blanks and information
can be obtained from the bureau's
offices at' Ephrata, Wash., or
Boise. Ida. i
lUfh(
BEA'
ANCIENT BEAT
BERLIN, (INS) An ancient
Roman house heating apparatus
has been discovered in Germany
still-in working order. The heat
irom the ancient furnace, on
passing through modern pipes,
maintains a temperature of 60
degrees, according to the Ger
man tourist office.
Andrew Butts
Dies; Spanish
War Veteran
Statesman News Service
ALBANY Final rites will be
held at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday for
Andrew M. Butts, 85, a Spanish
American war veteran who died
late Saturday in Portland. ;
Services for the former Al
bany resident will be held at the
Fisher Funeral home, with the'
Rev. W. M. WhitwelL Eugene,
officiating. Burial will be in the
Waverly Memorial cemetery
here.
Butts was born March 27, 1868,
in Delaware county, Ohio. He
served in Cuba and the Philip
pines with the -Fourth Ohio Vol
unteer infantry regiment in 1898,
and was mustered out of service
in September, 1900. .
He had resided in Albany from
1924 to 1951, when he moved to
Santa Clara, near Eugene. He
later moved to Portland.
Butts was past commander of
tbe Albany Veterans of Foreign
Wars post and of Phillips camp,
United Spanish War Veterans.
Survivors include a son, Oliver
P. Butts, Albany, and a daughter,
Mrs. Virginia Groat, Salem,
Soviet Seeks
Jobs in U.N.
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. OB
The Kremlin has launched a quiet
drive to get jobs for more Soviet
citizens on the United Nations
staff 1 particularly in the higher
brackets. - , 1
At present, there are 22 Soviet
citizens on the U. N. payroll at
the main headquarters in Man
hattan. The highest ranking Rus
sian on the secretariat is Assistant
Secretary General I. S Tcherny
chev, head of the Department of
Security; Council Affairs and for
mer ambassador to Sweden.
Under i the U. N. quota system
of alloting jobs to the 60 member
countries, the Russians are en
titled to between 116 and 155 citi
zens in ! jobs above the clerical
level. This has been the Russian
quota since the U. N. began but
Moscow never has chosen until
now to make an attempt to fill it
St. Paul Expects
1,000 to Attend
Benefit Dinner
Statesman Nrwi Senriet
ST. PAUL Mothers of St
Paul Catholic Parish are plan
ning a benefit dinner on Sunday,
Feb. 14, for playground equip
ment for St. Paul's Academy. A
roast-beef dinner will be served
at the City Hall from noon un
til 6 p.m. Preparations are being
made to serve 1,000 persons.
General chairmen are: Eileen
Kaufman, Martha Coleman,
Theresa Gooding and jLoretta
Kirk, all of whom are presidents
of various women's organizations
in the community. I
STUDENT OFFICERS i
CLEAR LAKE Serving; as offi
cers of the upper-grade student bo
dy this month are Kenneth Shun,
president; Jimmy Versteeg. sec
retary; Linda Watson, substitute:
and Terry Eicbelberger, fire mar
shal !
Victim of Rifle
WouncJ Improved
Statesman 'ewi Service
McMIIWVlLLE Gary Brown,
13-year-old Newberg lad who was
accidentally wounded Saturday
near Rickreall, was reported
making good progress Monday,
He underwent surgery here for
removal of a .22 rifle bullet which
lodged in his chest in a mishap
when he crawled through a fence.
CHANGES STATES, NOT TOWN
NEW MILFORD, Conn. (JP)
William H. Percy, railroad sta
tion agent here for 52 years, was
born in New Milford. Penn., j 88
years ago. He died in New Milford,
Conn. i
MAN-MADE RAIN SCOFFED
i
DEMING, I N.M., tfU- New
Mexico ranchers plagued by
drought nave been told ' by
Dr. E. J. Workman, president of
New Mexico' Institute of Mining
and Technology, "we do not now
know how to make rain." He
described silver iodine methods
of seeding clouds impractical .
Unopened Gift,
Saved for Dead
Korean War Vet
ALBUQUERQUE. N. M. WV
An unopened package beneath a
brown' and brittle yet somehow
gay tree continues to wait for a
Christmas that will never come.
CpLI Richard Lopejt wrote in
1950 to save the Christmas tree.
"I'm coming home." He was
drowned in Korea I before he
could start the journey.
His mother, Mrs. Salvador Lo
pez, has kept the tree! ever since.
It now occupies a special room
and will continue to; stay there
because, as Mrs. Lopez says, "He
asked me to save his iChristmas."
REDS PROVIDE FARM TITLE
MOSCOW Mv- In an effort to
speed its drive to raise farm
production and living standards
in the next three years, the So
viet Government has established
the honorary title of "Merited
Agronomist of the Republic" to
be awarded for outstanding serv
TALLMAN
PIANO STORES
395 S. 12th, Salem
LAW STUDENT EARN, LEARN
BOSTON, (JP) Young future
lawyers are "earning while learn
ing" at the federal Appellate
court! of Boston. Law students
get preference for jobs in the
court library which is known as
"the lawyers' laboratory." The
plan permits them to attend law
school nights while getting a val
uable ; pracitcal insight into law
during the day. Officially, they
are "court criers," but that takes
only a few minutes tin opening
and closing court ceremonies a
few days a month, j
METER PROVIDES JACKPOT
SUPERIOR, Wis.' t) - Robert
Cronin and Oswold Shellum, em
ployes of the Superior Water,
Light) and Power Co. were re
moving a meter from an empty
home -when a grain sample sack
rolled out It contained $400 in
bills, i When police! could not
find the owner, the finders won
the jackpot j -
BREAKFAST
.AT 7 A.M.
NORTH'S
In The Cipltol Shopping (infer
o "( nowiMf
4kV 13th piTTl
LE BR ATE HOFFMAN'S
DAY... THIS LIMITED
AL OFFER! !
NEYER-BEFORE REDUCTIONS
ON NEW HOFFMAN TV!
SAVE NOW ON THIS DELUXE
'54 DECORATOR CONSOLE
Any trm is that
it aM
lis ! :
Eddie Fisher
m
and oMitr racial rfkorfert,
tllll III JltXO IUTJIS
Aw ran an) I
V4J7 bW HU hU
Cl.lMi.M D. . i ..
Oar rwndw EnCE MKrtaaw mm
un-uu
WrilaarCatt
THE DEAN CLINIC
0M 10 ! I M aay FV.fc Friday.
- Ifottl S B.at. Maacay. Wasaooaay aft4 Friaay
Cab iLii Pfcyiiiii ... la 43t4 yaac.
i MI NOVfMAST SANOY BOUUVAt
TlliiM l IAjaia Pifttaa 11.
Wake Up
To More Comfort
Without NarxfatBackacb
Nantes baekalM,oM of ye ana1 Dart7,
fceadacbei and dixxhwa but b aoa to alow.
4owb of kidney function. Doctor say food
kidney foactiom la very important ta gooi
heahh.Wlauiiieewjdayeeatdftioei.aadi
a at i tea aad atrate. coxae thia iaaoortaat
t unction to alow down, maay folk aa&er ear
Stag backache fad Miserable. Minor Uad
der irritation da to cold or wroac diet may
camttimcBvai4itaorfrqmiaaea.
Doa't neglect kidnrn if these coadt
tinoa bother yen. Try Doaa'a Pffla-a mod di.
arctic It' amaxinf hew many times Doaa'i
Kfee nappy tttitt from these dineomforts
help the la miles of kidney tnhea and then
flash oat waste. AtUnr new. larfr. eememj
aia aad save moaerlGat Dona's FUJs today.
and his
SPECIAL GUESTS
7:30p.rn.KPTV(h.27
"Coaw-ba
i rrrr--3IAi; -'"Tl
If) I . 'iJ'fV-. .
I;! m 1
a7f gala atn (
amnafaaaTaf-
I I
;
1 'rwjf. J
BRAND NEW
2i-incii
EASY-VISION
reg.priti
birthday price .... 349.95
you
save
429.95
1 -
3
E
Motlel HM718
in mahogany finish
Imagine !-buying famed TV like Hoffman at a redaced price !
It' their birthday gift to you deluxe 21-inch console with
exclusive Easy-ViaicuiXenf, btndcrafted ciblnet, til the
extras. A rare opportunity to save, so hurrycome in today!
' Also available in limed pale, cherryxcood. .. .
yd I ley Television Center
, : I Two Valley Stores
' -;Salem... :.
2303 Fair9rouiKJs Rd. Ph. 21 91 3
Open Erery Ere Open Sun 1-6
Woodburn
171 Grant