- O&CTimber Revenue to Set : Record High in Marion. Polk . - Sit . . I Counties, But Checks Delayed Improvement -- By A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Correspondent r : WASHINGTON Marion and Polk counties win receive a record--smashing amount as their share this year in 0&.C timber revenue but exactly when the money will be paid is somewhat in doubt Out : of a total of $6,587,000 estimated to be the amount due Oregon's 18 western counties that share in O&C receipts, Marion and Polk counties will receive approximately $123,175 and $187,725 re spectively, i ! ' Bureau of Land Management of ficials haven't been able to deter mine exactly how much will go to sach county, but the above figures they say are expected to be very close to the final mark. : - Reason for the doubtful status of i the counties' share stems from the l, controverted O&C lands case. The revenue mentioned above was de- , rived, from logging on non-contro- verted O&C lands, but the formula fronT which each county's share ) is set is subject to be altered slightly according to the Cordon ' Ellsworth act passed by Coneress ' last spring to settle the Ion? c standing controverted lands ques- tion. f ! .': " , - F Bnlliitr Sstnglii I , ; BLM officials note that Presi- dent Eisenhower signed that, bill ; into law just a week : before , the 1934 fiscal .year ended (June 30 1 Is the end of the fiscal year), so they are " awaiting a legal ruling , on whether the new formula will apply to -all the timber receipts t for the past fiscal year.? I While the Change is not expected to make a great change in the ' amount due Marion and Polk coun r ties, i the- checks to each county I "are being held up until a decision ; is reached. t BLM logging during the past year in western Oregon was the t heaviest by far on record 18, , i 000,000 bd. ft., including, the Coos ''Bay Wagon Road lands. It was ', i divided as follows: 574,000,000 bd. ft. on O&C and 41.000,000 bd. ft. i Coos Bay Wagon Road.;' : The previous record was i the ; i year before, when 511,000,000 bd. ' ft. - were cut on O&C lands and i 41.000.000 bd. ft. on Coos Bay . Wagon Road. Inasmuch as ; this ; ; substantial increase in cutting was i accompanied by a drop in lumber i prices during the past year, the ! total revenue did not increase pro-: ! : portionately, even though it did set ia new record high. Last fall the i counties divided up $4,053,458. 1 .'! Bicsest Year Doe ' It j ' ,' BLM officials look forward ' to ! an even bigger logging year, judg ing bv increased timber demand of July and August and a larger - cutting program already mapped out and expected to be executed. , Also, the effect of the strike, they said, will tend to boost the price v of logs and consequently raise the revenue collected on O&C lands 'this coming year. :'u ? ; 1 Meanwhile, the prospect of the -.counties receiving their shares )ni the special fund of timber revenue, which has accumulated over the years during the! controverted O&C. dispute, remains a matter for i court determination,! and i. the ;i courts have been on vacation.. 'The ' question as far as the counties are concerned is whether an order of ' the U. S. Court of Appeals of last : spring will cause the money to be j distributed to the counties, or whether it will be done under the : t Cordon-Ellsworth act more recent , Ely enacted by Congress. ;i BLM and Forest Service officials : are awaiting legal determination J of this question, for the Treasury : Department has issued a stop 1 order on payment of any of the ! controverted funds until the issue I is resolved. Some authorities be 'ilieve it. may take a ruling of the ! Supreme Court to. end the dispute. ier Shortage Seen . . L Oregon's teacher shortage Is easing a little for the first time in several years. Mrs. Joy Hills Gubser. assistant superintendent of public , instruction, reported Wednesday, i , , She made her report to the an nual joint meetings of the boards of education and higher education. , Reasons for the improvement, she said, v are that many emer gency teachers have taken work to qualify them for regular certifi cates, and that Oregon is getting more; teachers from other states, Fifty per cent of the secondary education, trainees do not end up teaching in Oregon, the .boards learned. :. j 'This was attributed to many of then getting married, leaving the stat) or going into other occupa tions, j ; , And in the 1953-54 school year, 606 bf 1,962 who were certified to teach in elementary education did not choose to do so, said Mrs. Gubser. 1 " ' ' . I The new expansion of teacher training in the state colleges is influencing more young people to go into teaching, ! Charles D. Byrne, chancellor of higher edu cation, said. Administrators and faculty rep resentatives from the state depart ment of education and the state system of higher education spent the afternoon talking procedures for evaluation of the new teachv education program. i Enrollments at , state system summer sessions in J teacher educa tion programs showed a sharp 'up turn this year. Chancellor Byrne advised the group. u ' - Tuesday the board agreed it would ask the 1955 legislature for about $5,000,000 more than was ap propriated to k for the current biennium.' , . f Principal increase lis :the new teaching hospital at the med: , school which will uip - the budge. $1,600,000 for an estimated 15 months' operation during the two year period, j, 1 TO BUILD RADAR BASE H I ; WASHINGTON' (UP) The Air Force said Tuesday that it plans to build an aircraft control and warn ing site at Red Bluff, Calif. A spokesman said that such a radar site normally has 150 men. 0t I MAY 21 S TAR G AiElC AMS MAR. 22 14-17-21-33 TAUIUS AWL 21 MAV 22 KM 22 CANCEI JUNE 23 JULY 23 uo JULY 24 - AUG. 23 4- 4-lMJ 41-77-78 VBOO AUG. 24 SEPT 22 2- 7-2631 3367 -By CLAY K POLLAN- Yovc Daily Activity CuiV JK According to fc Ston. To develop messoge for Thursday, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. StPT OCT. fcl-53-5?-fia I Perfect 2 Someone . 3 Make 4 Don't 5 The " 4 Argue 7 Could Money, t AHection 10 And 11 You ' ' 12 Definite 13 Wonderful U Use 15 For 16 Or 17 Caution 18 Hove ' 19 An- . 20 Plant With Elderly , 23 Person 24 Lose 25 Telephone 126 Help 27 And 28 Unfinished 29 Now 30 House (3) Good 31 If 41 Need 32 Good ' 62 Home 33 You'd 63 Your v 34 Romantic : 64 Is 1 . 35 Sharp-edged 65 Eleciricol 36 Better 37 Travels 38 Business 39 Stay 40 Alone ' 41 Track 42 Judgment 43 Today 44 Or 66 And; 67 Them 68 At I 1 69 Yield V 70 AKair 71 In . 72 Home 73 Today , ' 74 Assistonc SCOtPK i OCT. 24 NOV. 22 V 3-12-23-29 (V 4952 62-67 VL 45 lmtnwnl 75 Devices 46 Are . 76 Get 47 MoilboK 48 Let 49 But 50 Or 51 Envious 52 Moke 53 And , 54 Is 55 May 56 Parties 57 Indicated 58 Pet 59 Deceitful' 60 Friend ' 77 Of 78 Wollet 79 Yourj - 80 Extra 81 Or i 82 Change 83 Socio! 1 1 1 84 Surprise; e j news t SAOfTTAMUS NOV. I DEC 19-22-23-5011 ISM1-74 VM CAfWCOtM OK. 23 i JAW.20 1 1 V ; jUMUunus JAN.2I PE8. k 1-18-2808 rTI 86 ErxKMement72 81-S3MJ Later 88 Office 89 Rest 90 Picture FEB. rtsm- MAR. 21 t, 9-27-32-42" 154-63-73 VS Ladies of GAR Elect Of ficers ; PORTLAND un Mrs. Nellie Howe, Grand Rapids, Mich., was elected president of the Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic at the national convention here Wednesday. Others ! elected: Mrs. Theo McCallum, Neenah, Wis., senior vice president; Mrs. Gussie Morin, Seattle, junior vice president; Mrs. Rosalie Leonard. Boise, treasurer: Mrs.: Mabel S. Taylor, Providence, R. I., secretary. The National 1 Betsy Ross Gub, another G.A.R. auxiliary, elected Mrs, Alice Ure, Wichita, Has president; Mrs. Nora Falloon, Twin Falls,' Idaho, senior vice president; Mrs. Louella Ore, Tulsa, Okla., junior vice president; Mrs. Edna Lindsey, Portland, Ore, secretary; and Mrs. . Twanetta Paull, Kansas City, Mo., treasurer. BEsr-Ktiomi H0UE REMEDY for Suffering of 0OU 'vernight 1 f I service to Southern Oregon IrVs ttse assay, asvf wj to i AalUaL Medford, OranU ' Psys. Sleep aa yow rtde In Pun . faan or in chair ear with oep i eahiond raeHainc Mats. : Knjoy louoe ear with mnck. rereahment eeryio. Lmw ki Um t renins;; arrive nxt mens Inf. Overniaiit Trice retura ina;, tea. Leer tare dailL G. A. Larson, Agent Phone 3-9244 il t : i MTHE REASON HO , OTHER MARGARINE TASTES SO GOOD .. i i'-.M'Wr-.-.-.i. y . i (r s ' . i- ' 2-.f """" ' ' . 1 1 j 1T1 Tl ' ' l : aire m Jk m , i I ' ' f f I I I ..1 , ' . . . i IS CU74llYDArilCO FINER INGREDIENT!' Of courso there's a : difference In margarines ? A inssTfaxine can only taste m fresh , and iweet and rood as what goes foto it. That's why so many folks are getting: special enjoyment from new Sunnybank. Discover what a wonderful difference its finer ingredient makes. mxAotu root Drea when cold and oa freshest bread! Anottr reason to try Sunnybank, today.' Get Sunnybank at SAFUVJIFJ today! l BatdesaiipMOV Stops at Seattle SEATTLE im ("'Mighty Mo, the famous old battleships upon whose decks the Japanese surren der was signed, eased into Seattle Wednesday on her last stop before she joins the mothball fleet The 45,000-ton . Missouri will be stored away with other idle ships at the Bremerton, ! Wash;, Naval Shipyard. 1 x 1 'I- ' Britain Asks Red China for Compensation LONDON (UP) Britain de manded more than one million dollars compensation from Com munist China Tuesday for the shooting tiown of a British air liner oft Hainan Island with the loss of 10 lives. r ' ' Three of the victims '"were Americans. ' . r- The Cathay Pacific Airliner was shot down off Hainan Island" July 23. Two , Chinese Communist fighter planes that tried to inter fere with the air and 'sea search for. survivors were shot down by American planes. , ; . -1. : ' ' i 1 1 1 1 -i ' 1 " Swedish industry .today produces 60 to 65 per cent more goods than before the war. ' " Promotions Announceld f or State Workers Twenty-six state employes in the Salem area received promotions in August, the State Civil Service Commission announced Wednesday, in ine neaitn and welfare classes. carl A. coulson advanced to psy chiatric aide II: Lucille Henderson to psychiatric nursing" instructor I; Kuth L. Walton to practical nurse I: and Vivian Webber and Dorothy Elshire to caseworker t Eleven of the 26 are clerical workers. Vivian ; Gibbs was cro- moted to clerk typist I; Gloria Gale to clerk stenographer I: and Lora Lee Brown to dictating -ma chine transcriber I. Lacule Ken nedy became s clerk III and Vera Aaron,, Lorena Devine, Madeline Harris, : Naomi Horn, ; Jeanette Johnson and Betty Jean Sink, clerk typist II'. New. clerk stenographer II's are I. ' - Hello Folks! Ive come earlr te tnrite yew te A ihi bsiAiEii nuns SALSS ;1 - EVENT IN THE HISTORY OF ; Vt I . . ... THI NORTHWEST! : .' '; Aj tj !' n i noni uniicc . V li We . VI ! llVWla I "V DADTY PARADE ; j C v rMU II. or HOMES f I SAT $UN.f SEPT. 18-19 ThereH fee fetr tews In v Ronald Heights SOON 1 J I ' Witch for the ' y , . fc : i " r t V... '. Alice Goffrier and Charlene Foust Juanita Stark is a typist III. Vera Wolcott a stenographer III. and Helen Krugen a clerk IV, Remaining promotions are: Roscoe West, employment security deputy I; Melbourne Jenks- high way maintenance man TH: Wood row Damerell, appraisal engineer i IU; Robert R. Wippel, vocational ! rehabilitation supervisor I; John Rockenfeller," engineering Aide II; and William Kanipe, shipping point ! inspector supervisor II. YOU'RE SMART YOU'RE SLIM and peppy, too, fx vyhen you diet deliciously . u,uu-: : : ' LA WHITE: DIET Bread I V i MADE WITHOUT FATS i OS SHORTENING! 53 MORE PROTEIN! 3 TIMES THE VITAMINS! ONLY 43 CALORIES PER TASTY SLICE f NUTRITIOUS DELICIOUS! WM eoch sseql. ewjeyKw sMkiovs soKsfyiitg slice (.Uejeeedorf VitsvHigsi fraleia White D4el Srswe) sws! stM stay withie yew calorie Rssihl Try ft tooy. now, of your grocer's! A tin & m j mm m & mtjBs mi) 1 ..-.'', ' ' ' ........ S il'lkS' f HAMILTON'S I X38'' "n in i .m in r" ' ' ' '-'v r ' . EASILY CONVERTED , f LIK Tt:iS FOR USE AS PEPS- ... III v.. ,-: '.. f - ' . ' ' mm m r "v , . 1 ' . ' - . -; ; f v J ' ','A. 'r j ; j fSALE PQICGb" sf .."- I i sr- if ... ....- II H TOOtTTHElt UKI IV t III ' THIS WHEN MOT IN USI! I s. ' - - J' I ' fS ALE PRICED TO, tlVI I . .' FORMS STURDY SPACE SAVING DOUSU SUNK 6EDSI XJ. tea. Of. I 7 Uw'e rU fnm' imwlwi rrvM n rv tarin VtA) A.V.N. mtv .vva v v . rr . U WVfc . the easy cooveoieoce of a trundle bed . . ' axid , the space economy of a bank bed ... all rolled into ooe! We've never before been able to offer so mjch otfliry and comfort in sleeping accommoda. : tiotis for two at sucb-aa ecooomicaHjr low price. Sturdy steel constroction with handsome wrought i iron grille work in both head and foot ends. Satin ; black finish that will take lots of abuse. Two inner spring mattresses covered in strong ACA ticking. Smooth-rolling casters make it easy to more either . section for cleaning, dusting and making the beds. Bed todcry.YouH buy cndftCrva! Don let sleeping space be a problem b yocr home I Come m and see theSbeprfteVTrio- PARK FREE WHILE SHOPPirJS AT HAMIITON'S OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL9 t i . m v U A MM TOM niPMiTiinc ra CL iinifiin uil; I Ulllll I UIIL , U U. . ri - 'V-M 1 .! "" .iiiiiuiu I.,.,,, ...i..,, ,, ,., ,, ,. ,,; . .; ... 'fZTT-- 230 CHEMERETA . SALEM OREOOM eudcet 'CIUVEXY ' : 't U JU L-ml 'an iTT-Miiiiiii 'J ' in r- 1kTirjJti:-V:-stojiiiirTiiiiu i.nii---- i miir i r i t ' i t