The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 13, 1955, Page 5, Image 5

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TWO MINOR CRASHES
Two minor non-injBry crashes
occurred Tuesday afternoon in Sa
lem, police said. At, about 1:30
p.m. cars driven by Warren E.
Gilbert, Portland, and Virginia L.
Keimeyer, 3320 Duncan Ave
crashed at Madison and Summer
"Streets. About 2:15 p.m. vehicles
operated by Vernon Everett Shel
don, 2514 N. Commercial St., and
Benjamin Avon Throneberry, 2133
N. Commercial St., crashed at
1 Liberty and Columbia street.
WARM WEATHER HINTS. Our
Tasty Wieners. 5 lb. Carton $1.50.
Mince Ham, Polish Rings, Stick
Bologna 35c lb. Midget Markets.
' GIRL. 14, MISSING
Ida Franklin,. 14, of Cresswell
Tuesday was reported to Salem
police as missing by her aunt,
Mrs. Lola Leidtke, Brooks. Mrs.
Leidfke told police she took the
girl late Monday to a Salem bus
station to board a bus for Cress
well and that, her father Robert
Franklin reported from Cresswell
that che didn't show up.
SALARY HIKE APPROVED "
Marion County; Court Tuesday
approved giving two recently hired
deputy sheriffs maximum salaries
of $3,888 a year. Both are criminal jkjn Chamber of Commerce
deputies and will receive the in
crease from emergency funds
since the 1955-56 budget failed to
nrovide funds for the usual in-
crease gives deputies after six ; m2 vcar
BRANT RITES SET
Funeral services for George Ed
ward Brant, retired Salem High
Scrool teacher who died Sunday,
will be 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the
Clough-Barrick chapel. Burial will
be at Miller Cemetefy, Silverton.
Brant, a shop teacher, lived at 4625
Sunnyview Ave. . .; ;
BOY TARGET
Dates with the city police juve
nile officer have been set for two
brothers, ages 16 and 12, who ad
mitted shooting a 6-year-old neigh
bor boy in the feet and stomach
Monday with a defective BB gun
which they said sometimes didn't
shoot at all.
Liberal credit given on plates,
extractions, & all branches of
dentistry. Painless Parker, Den
tist, 125 N. liberty, Salem.
CONDITION FAIR ,
Mrs. Edith M. Wigle, 39, 460
King wood Ave., is under observa
tion at Salem Memorial Hospital
where she ,was rushed from her
home about Tuesday noon after
becoming ill. Her condition was
reported as "fair." ,
GROVE TO SPEAK .
Manager Stanley. Grove of Sa-
will
address Salem lions Club Thurs
day noon at a meeting in the Mar
ion Hotel. He will outline some of
the chamber's plans for the com-
Four Grass
Seed Hearings
Due in July
months' in service.
Luti Flower Shop will be closed
July 13th thru 19th. .
BATTERY SPECIALIST
Lloyd Barries, 2225 Mill .St.
Tuesday reported to police feat
someone stole the battery from
his car. parked inside his garage
at fte time. A. R. Lucas, 2220
Trade St., whose garage was also
entered, said the prowler peeled
back the floor mat above his car's
battery, but took nothings
TRENT ON LEAVE " '
A3c David C Trent has just
completed basic training at Parks
Air Force Base, Calif., and is now
home on leave visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Claud A. Trent, Sa
lem Route 6, Box 785. After bis
leave he will report to Lowry
AFB, Colo., for technical training
as a weapons mechanic.
IOWA PICNIC SLATED -.The
annual Iowa Picnic wiH be
hed at 1 p.m. Sunday, July 24, at
Bush's Pasture, Roy Smith, presi
dent of the Iowa group, announced
Tuesday. The picnic will feature
a covered-dish picnic dinner, and
all former residents of Iowa afe
welcome, Smith said. : v
SIGMA CH1S MEET ;
At the monthly meeting of Sa
lem Sigma Chi alumni tonight,
Frank Waller and Bill Main waring
wfU report on the fraternity's cen
tennial year convention which both
recently attended. The 6:15 din
ner meeting k .at the Marion ho
tel. . ; .
LT. SLOAN ON LEAVE
! Second LL Gordon C. Sloan, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Sloan, 1290
McCoy Ave., has completed pri
mary flight training at Mar ana
Air Base, Tucson, Aril., and is
visiting his parents here on, leave.
He will leave Sunday for a new
base in Texas. ;
CtTRBSTONE LAW LESSON
Spotting a policeman stopping
t his expired parking meter,
Salem motorist Monday jaywalked
' across a downtown street in time
to save the 50-cent overparking
fine, was ticketed for jaywalking
for which the bail is $2.50.
CALL FOR BIDS . j
Marion County Court will adver
tise for bids this week for a large
multiplate pipe arch to be used
on a county road north of Wood
burn. Bids will be opened July 27
at 10:19- a.m. Estimated cost is
$2,700.
BUILDING PERMITS
H. T. Amkk Tuesday was issued
a Salem building permit to do $300
in alterations to his carport at
880 Breys Ave., and the Madsen
Wrecking Co. was issued a permit
ii wrecs: a one-story garage at
745 Hood St. j
FRESH FROM OUR SMOKE
HOUSE. LEAN SIDE BACON
CANADIAN STYLE BACON. It's
Double Smoked for Extra Flavor.
PRISONER STILL GONE
Jack Funston of Salem, who
Monday walked away from a city
jail trusty gang working at the
airport, was still missing Tuesday,
police said. Funs toon was serving
out a $25 fine for drunkenness im
posed Monday.
GAS TAKEN
Bill Sctriitt of Sanitary Service
Co. Inc.-Tuesday reported to po
lice that someone during the night
climbed the' fence surrounding his
garbage trucks and drained about
40 gallons of gas from them. '
Four bearings, designed to
determine the desirability and
necessity of establishing a com
modity commission for Oregon
growers of chewing fescue and
creeping red fescue seed later
this month were announced by
State Agricultural Department
Director James F. Short Tues
day.
Hearings are slated in Marion,
Clackamas, Union and Linn counties.
These counties produce more
than 5 per cent of the total pro
duction of these grasses, Short
said. Growers of these seeds
filed a petition, the first comple
ted under the 1953 Commodity
Commission enabling act, in May
asking for the hearings.
Dates and places of the hear
ings; slated to start at 8 p.m.
follow:
Marion County July 22,
Grange Hall in Woodburn.
Union County July 25, Farm
Bureau Hall at Island City.
Linn County July 26, ML
Pleasant Schoolhouse, south of
Stayton.
Clackamas County July 29,
Grange nail at loiton.
Frank McKennon, plant divi
sion chief, and Hugh Taylor,- his
assistant, will conduct the hear
ings for the Agricultural Depart
ment McKennon will be at
Woodburn and Island City and
Taylor-at Colton and ML Pleas
ant.
.The law directs the department
to consider six specific factors in
determining, following hearings, 1
whether a proposed commission
is in the, general welfare of the
growers of the community..
These factors are:
1. Current ; market prices to
grower.
2. Costs of production..
3. Market price trends.
4. Stability of prices.
5. Relationship between price
and all production cost factors.
6. Commodity utilization andj
possibility- of i increasing utiliza-i
tion by research, promotion, im
proved marketing practices and
improved time and place utility.
If the department should de
termine, upon basis of the hear
ings, that need exists for this
commission, the department will
later conduct a referendum
among all growers of the grass
seeds.
A commission will be created
only, Short said, if the total vot
ing growers produce more than
one-third of the total quantity of
the commodity grown in Oregon.
Suit Charges
Explosion of
Bus Muffler
A muffler which allegedly explod
ed in the face of a mechanic in
specting a stalled bus south of
Salem resulted in a $30,000 damage
suit filed Tuesday in Marion Coun
ty Circuit Court.
The mechanic, Frank Danskey,
charges Carl L. Willett and Ex
change Parts Service with negli
gence in the mishap. Willett is
accused of attempting to start the
vehicle while Danskey was inspect
ing the bus to find out why it
broke down.
The complaint says Danskey
sustained deep cuts and contusions
about the face and injuries to his
eyes, some of which were perman
ent in nature.
He seeks $25,000 general dam
ages and $5,000 special damages,
wr TT -
woman nun in
Fall From Gar
Mrs. Ruth Bouge, 22, Willamina,
was under- observation in Salem
Memorial Hospital Tuesday after
reportedly falling from a car ear
lier in the day near Dallas-Independence
junction west of Salem,
Jay Brown of Willamette ambu
lance said.
Her condition was described as
good" by the hospital, where it
was found no bones were broken.
Brown said he understands the
door of Mrs. Bouge's husband car
flew open. He said her husband
started to drive her back to Salem
after the fall, but ran out of gas
midway, so called his ambulance.
Etzel Named
Conservation
Award Winner
-. --.,-.-.. -
Frank Etzel, fanner in the
Sublimity hills, was named, the
second place .winner in Oregon
in the national annual soil-con
servation award competition, ac
cording to' announcement Tues
day from the Goodyear Tire and
Rubber Company, sponsor of the
program. '
Selections are made through
the soil conservation districts in
the states, and the name of Etzel
was submitted by Ralph A. Wil
son, chairman of the Santiam
Soil Conservation district with
headquarters at Stayton.
Oregon's first place winners
are Rodne? Rosebrook, Route 3,
Box 136, Bend, selected by the
Midstate Soil Conservation dis
trict as its representative, and
Roy Stanton, Star Route, -Red
mond, selected as the outstand
ing fariner-cooperator in the
grand award winning district
The two Oregon representa
tives of the ' first place district,
along with the 98 winners from
the 47 other states, will be guests
f the sponsor on a vacation
outing to Wigwam Guest Resort
and Goodyear Farms, Litchfield
Park,, Ariz., in November - or
December. -
The first and second place dis
tricts each will receive a bronze
plaque as permanent symbol of
its achievement, presentation to
be made at a state meeting of
the National Association of Soil
Conservation districts later this
year. '
The 1955 contest which began
on May 1 of this year, will run
Former Salem
Woman Dies
Death of a former Salem resi
dent, Mrs. Robert Clark, 3J, at
Phoenix, Ariz., was reported by
relatives here Tuesday.
Mrs. Clark, the former Merri
lynn Boyd, was born at Cottage
Grove and attended Salem schools.
leaving here 12 years ago. Sur
vivors include her husband at
Phoenix and two great aunts. at
Salem, Mrs. Blanche Walling and
Mrs. Dot Beal.
Final rites were held at Phoenix.
Statesman, C, WedY Jury U, rf53fc ftv
" - : : ' 1
Mechanized Process To Help
Revive' Valley Flax Industry
Timber Sales
Top Estimate
Three tracts of Bureau of Land
Management salvage timber in
linn, Lincoln and Clackamas coun
ties Tuesday sold at double the
aggregate appraisal value at an
auction conducted by the Salem
district forester. A total of $179,
760.50 was offered for timber ap
praised at $84,762.25.
The McPherson Lumber Co. of
Lebanon offered the high bid of
$64 per 1,000 board feet for a Linn
County tract. Bid was $127,732.90
for the 2,738,000 board feet of
which 1 1,884,000 was Douglas fir.
Appraised price was $60,945.10.
Clemens Forest Products Inc. of
fered the high bid of $43,894 for
1,291,000 board feet of Douglas fir
in Lincoln County.
Ervia Grubbe of Molalla bid $8,
133.60 for . 240,000 board feet in
Clackamas County appraised at
$4,193.95.
New, highly mechanized flax,
processing operations at Jeffer--son
will go a long way toward
reviving the Willamette Valley
flax industry, federal agronomist
Jesse Harmon of Corvallis pre
dicted Tuesday.
The flax expert, who is a U.S.
Department of Agriculture engi
neer stationed at Oregon State
College, helped develop the ma
chinery which will process flax
on an assembly line process. A
group of investors bought the
equipment after the government
experiments.
Harmon told Salem Kiwanis
Club at a luncheon Tuesday that
he believed fibre flax still has
a great potential in the valley.
even though flax acreage has de
clined from a peak of 18,000 to
only 2,000 at present
He said the high cost of hand
labor ' was a big factor in the
until March 31, 1956, when tabu
lation pf the .hundreds of appli
cants begin. . .
decline, since foreign eompeti
tion was based on cheap labor.
Improved machinery, to re-'
duce the man hours of labor in
volved, is the only answer to this
problem, Harmon indicated. Fast
handling, automatic drying, gen
tle but thorough extraction of
seed and fibre are among the ,
accomplishments of the machin
ery he described and showed ia
two industrial movies taken ia
the valley flax fields and plants.
The only flax operations re
maining in the valley are at tht
State Prison and at Jefferson.
Willamette Valley and one Lake
Michigan section are the only
U.S. areas which can grow fibre
flax successfully. ,
i
Gov. Patterson .
To Name State
Water Board
Appointment of a water resources
commission, approved by the 1955
Legislature, was expected to be
announced by Gov. Paul L. Patter
son within the next few days, he
indicated Tuesday.
Creation of this commission was
requested by the governor. The
1955 Legislature approved an ap
propriation and established state
wide responsibilities of such
board.
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Public
Records
Hubbard Lad
Arrested for
Store Entry
Itattiaua Ncwi Strrtc
WOODBURN-A 12-year-old Hub
bard boy who hid in the C. H.
Ahrens hardware store until it clos
ed Monday night , and - then - pro
ceeded to borrow a bow and arrow
from hardware stock and shoot
four arrows into the rear wall, was
arrested Tuesday by Marion Coun
ty sheriffs deputies.
The boy left by way of a side
door, taking with him a .38 calibre
revolver and 18 rounds of ammuni
tion and $6.37 in cash, the sheriffs
office reported. All items were re
covered when authorities picked up
the boy Tuesday afternoon.
He was turned over to the county
juvenile department
MARRIAGE LICENSE
APPLICATIONS
Warren Dale Thomas, 20, clerk,
'2134 Broadway St, and Esther
Beth Periman, 19, bookkeeper,
630 N. Cottage St, both Salem.
Edward Daniel Malone, 44, log
ger, and Olive Murine Sharp, 33,
housewife, both Castle Bock,
Wash.
Emil John Rexin, 24, psychia
tric aid, 1177 Court St, and Rose
marie Falstead. 24, teacher, 1177
Court St., both Salem.
Neil Edgar Daugherty, 22, U.S.
Air Force, 1632 Court St, and
LouCeil Ruth Jenkins, 20, derk,
630 N. Winter St, both Salem.
CIRCUIT COURT
Betty J. Helstrom vs. Robert D.
Helstrom; Divorce decree grant
ed. - j
John L. Klavohn ts. Harriett i
i D. Klavohn: Divorce etrit:
granted. .
Frank Danskey vs. Carl L Wil-;
lett and Exchange Parts Service:
Plaintiff seeks $23,000 general
damages and $5,000 special dam
ages alleging damages and injur
ies were result of direct and
proximate negligence of defendr
; ants. - .
' PROBATE COURT '
Henry J. Reas estate: Ordered
settled.
Joveda Averitt guardianship
. estate: Guardian authorized to
accept compromise o f f e r of
$1,000 on alleged cause of action
involving injuries to minor.
MUNICIPAL COURT
Harold Allen "Taylor, charged
. March 25 with driving while in
! toxica ted,- trial set for 1:30 pm.
Thursday. . .
Births
BEALS To Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Beals, 3325 Hollywood Ave., ' a
daughter, Tuesday, July 12 in Sa
lem General HospitaL
GRAY To Mr. and Mrs. James
Gray, 665 Patterson Ave., a son.
Tuesday, July 12 in Salem General
HospitaL
State Fair to
Present 40
Quilt Prizes
More than 40 cash prices will be
offered for quilts exhibited at the
1955 Oregon State Fair, Mrs. Edna
Uuman, superintendent of the tex
tiles department said Tuesday.
The State Fair will open Saturday,
Sept 3, and continue through Sept
10 at Salem.
"Since making a quilt to exhibit
at the State Fair is practically a
year's project for many , women,"
Mrs. Ullman said, "we decided
there ought to be a few more
nrizes Ouilts . will be stressed
mnrA than mw " I
Prize money in the textiles de
partment will total $1,400 which
Mrs. Ullman said is about $200
more than at the 1954 fair.
Some 400 entrants are expected
to compete for the prizes and some
of them will send or bring 10 or
15 items' to the fair.
Special prizes will include a sew
ing machine for the entrant who
wins the most prizes on items i
made from cotton bags, and a gold
cup for the winner of the nation
wide crochet contest.
Other divisions of the textile de
partment include household fur
nishings. towels, table mats, bed
room linens, table furnishings,
rugs, knitting, plain sewing em
broidered pictures and wall hang
ings, needlepoint hand weaving,
baby clothes, children's clothing,
a men's division and miscellan
eous. -'.!
liiDifn'nilfWiis
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