Valley News Statesman News Service Second.Annual Ankeny Fair Set for Grange Hall Saturday JEFFERSON, Sept. lft Plans are complete for the second annual fair and ham supper to be sponsored by Ankeny grange Saturday, Sept. 22. Rules and classes were announced this week. One hundred dollars in cash prizes will be awarded. . Anyone may enter the fair, but all entries must be in the hall by 10:00 a.m., Saturday morning. They must be made or grown bv the 1 exhibitor, vegetables will be BPW Club Scats New Officer Slate Statesman Newt Service W1LLAMINA, Sep1- U-Officer Installation ceremonies were held Wednesday evening for the Wil lamina BPW chapter at Emman uel Lutheran Church auditorium. Mrs. Freda Peterson of Dallas was installing officer, assisted by Mrs. Nate Burns of Canby, a past tate president. Officers installed were: Presi- aent, Mrs. Ida Duntlas; vice pres- sauce, banana loaf and all nut idrnt. Mrs. Sally Edmiston:, sec- breads. This group also includes end vice president, Mrs. K d n a rookies in plates of six, in five' Dundas; treasurer. Mrs. S a r a classes oatmeal, ice box brown Myers; recording secretary. Mrs.s, chocolate chip and sugar. I Lucille Mitchell: corresponding Bread Fnlrles Due j secretary, Mrs. Velda Ford; trus- Class Ill-Best glass of jelly 'to . Mrs. Veva Blanchard. Mrs. be opened;' best jar of fruit, best, Blanche Yoast and Mrs. Doris ! jar of pickles and best jar of veg-: Felton. letablcs 'none of the three to be Committee chairmen were also 'opened.) I Installed, and are: Legislation, Class IV Bread, white and! Mrs. Ruth Leger; public affairs, , wheat. Yeast rolls, white and, Mrs. Barbara Elliott; education ; wheat. and vocation. Mrs. Dorothy Buf-; Class V Textiles. Wearing ap-j fington; health and safety, Mrs. ' parel; crocheting and knitting and ' Alice Anderson: international re- handwork. lation. Mrs. lone Kilgore; national Class VI Floral. This includes safety and civil defense: Mrs. four divisions: formal, informal,1 Blanche Yoast; news service, miniature and plants. Mrs. Lois Mendenhall; program. Ham Dinner Set j Mrs. Sally Edmiston. Class VII 4-H clubs." Sewing A dish garden was presented to Mrs. Esther Fawk, who will re- tire as postmaster in October, after having held the position the past 17 years. Ml. Angel UF Meet at Citv' Hull Tonight Statesman News .Service MT. ANGEL, Sept. 16 - All Untied Fund solicitors. Campaign viiaiiinaii uriir untiri aim i 11 r directors of the Mt. Angel I'nited Fund will meet at the city hall Monday, Sept. 17, at 8 p m. to man out details for the drive to open September 19. Drive supplies and literature ' IT I v-Vllll JLl will be handed out and Hugh Mc-j " j Naughton from the Salem office j lummii nws srrvir will be present to address the, ZE.NA. Sept. 16.-The Lincoln, solicitors and give final instruc- Zona. Spring Valley Parents Club ,,on (will hold their first meeting of the' Solicitors will be assigned to y,.ar on Thursdav, September 20 ' their districts, so it is very im-lat 2: 13 oni. at the Lincoln School. portant that all be there. Gardeners to See Slides Statesman News Service JEFFERSON, 'Sept. 15 - Seth French of Albany will show col ored slides at the Monday mcet - ing oi mc jeiierson rnenoiy Garden Club. The pictures were taken at the club's annual sum mer flower show in August. On the hospitality committee will be Mr. and Mrs. Roland Wall, Mrs. Guv Roland and Josephine Get Chell. PTA Kick-Off Set Thursday Statesman News Service JEFFERSON, Sept. 15 - Mem bers of the Jefferson Parent Teachers Association announce the , . , f , u i i first meeting of the school year , , j c n - for Thursday, Sept. 20. A recrp-1 linn inr lf.rher will start with dessert served at 7:30 p.m.. in the library. Mr. and Mrs. Her man Vose will show pictures of heir European trip. Mrs. Burton Ferguson is president" and Mrs. Charles Henion is publicity chair man PTA council members will meet Monday at R pm school library. in the high Aurora Youllis Enrolled at WU Statesman News Service AURORA, Sept. 16-rTwe former servicemen, Jack Rasmussen, son of Mr. and Mrs, John Rasmussen, and Charles Williams, son of Mrs. J. L. Williams, both, of Butteville have enrolled at Willamette Uni versity for their freshman year. Young Rasmussen saw a lot of Germany while he was in the service and Williams was with the Air Force stationed in Newfound land. TEACHER BECEPTION SET HUBBARD, Sept. 16 Hubbard PTA wilf meet Monday evening. Sept. 17 at 6:30 p.m. A no-host supper1 and reception for the school personnel is planned for this first fall meeting of the group. Several new teachers and a new principal are on the grade school faculty. The public is invited. MISSIONARIES ON BORDER JEFFERSON, ( Sept. IS Friends here have received word, from Mr. and Mrs. Andy Paschall who are at El Paso, Texas. They are living in a trailer, house and doing mis sionary work across the border in ataxias. judged for suitability for immedi ate consumption and fruit will be judged according to uniformity and quality. No article can be entered in more than one class or division. All exhibits will remain in place until 9:00 p m. Fruit and Vegetables Display in Class I will be plates nntninina fivo aaAk nl nnnla : pears, prunes, grapes, tomatoes cucumbers, potatoes, carrots and ears of corn. Also included in this class will be plates of 12 walnuts filbert, snap beans, and best head of cabbage. Class II includes cakes. They are classified as sponge, angel food, butter, prepared cake mix, and loaf cakes which include apple I. drawstring apron; sewing 2, gathered skirt; Teen Age Miss, dress, knitting. TV booties and j sweaters. Canning One jar each of two fruits, pickles and relish, jam and jelly, vegetables lone jar of two kinds. Cooking i advanced) white or brown bread; plate of I five cookies 'beginners'. Art open class. Class VIII Miscellaneous. This dmsion is reserved (or items that cannot be classified in any other division and for the purpose of displaying to the public items of particular interest of an odd or rare nature. The ham dinner will be served (rom 6 M p m Parents Club j lit Dr. William Swettman, director of Music Education ol Salem Pub lic Schools will be the guest speak er and will explain this year's music program for children who wish to. participate. Hostesses for this meeting will be the new officers, president, Mrs. Joe Shepard; vice president, Mrs. Joe Camilla: and secretary treasurer, Mrs. Avalt Miller. It is hoped that all the new par rnt, and 0d wil acnd fjrs, jmD0rlant mpctinir of the Parents Club. Itoscdalc Pupils Offered Saturday Music Lessons SUtfuman Krwi Srrvlre ROSEDALE, Sept. 14 Marion Miller, new director of Salem Suburban Schools, attended Rose- dale Parents Club's first meeting He introduced Dr. Swettman, di At nf mil cist il'hn iteAaanla4 . , ' :',., ,i ,: ; I new p an for instrumental music I. .Kll,K. . ui. 'r suburban schools. , ! aiuruny muining iiimiuc- ! '" P"'0'!. 'h n instructor for each type of instrument rath er than one instructor for all types, is planned. Special projects for the next three months were planned and committees appointed. Meetings will be held on the second Wed- nrsrfay of each month. Mrs. Edwin Caldwell's third and fourth grades received the room award. New Cafeteria Used at Stayton SUteimaa News Strvlrt STAYTON, Sept. 15 - Stayton High School is using its new cafe teria which was ready for the opening of school on Monday. Work has been going on all sum mer so it could be completed in time for school. It is equipped with the latest equipment includ ing a dishwasher. Mrs. Becky Morgan Is head cook and Mrs. Frank is her assistant. They will be assisted by students in serving. RON HOXIE DISCHARGED LINCOLN, Sept. 15 -Ron Hoxie has been discharged from the Army after serving a year in Ger many and a year at Ft. Ord. He will continue his education at Will amette University Law School. Ron is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hoxie. OFF TO OREGON STATE PRATUM, Sept. 15-Miss Doryce deVries will leave for Oregon State College Sunday. She will be living In Winston House and will enroll jia domestic science. ; Yamhill County Takes Over Eola Farm Labor Camp lUUnu Ntwi Strrlra McMINNVlLLE, Sept. It Con trol of Kola Village, better known as the Dayton Labor Camp, has passed completely into the hands of Yamhill County after several years of joint federal and county operation. amhill County housing author ity, headed by Guy Shumway, Mc Minnville, will run the camp which is used mostly by transient farm laborers. Federal government withdrawal from the camp may mean that the camp will be closed if expenses become greater than rentals. Fall Flower Plans Topic at Hazel Green I Statesman News Servlrt i HAZEL GREEN, Sept. 16-The question of what to plant in the fall that will continu . color in the ! garden after t h e first spring flowers have gone created much I Interest at the meeting of the La- bish Meadows gardeners Thurs- 1 day The meeting was held at hc! I Tm-1rn Qtiwlxr me of Mrs. Mary McCIure in'UIlUd OllHl home Salem with Mrs. Alvin VanCleave presiding during the business ses sion and Mrs. Waldo Lowery dur ing the plant sale. Featured at the meeting were a question box roll-call, a talk on growing lilies by Mrs. A. M. Za-' hare, and a report on the state fair garden show by Mrs. Jack Bartlett as well as instructions for floral exhibits at the North Marion fair. Janet Bartlett won the door prize of a special iris plant and the Sept. 27 meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Za - hare with E. H. Bixby of t h e Oregon soil clinic as speaker. Women Meet At Union Hill Statesman Ktwt Servlra UNION HILL, Sept. 18 The first1 fall meeting of the Union Hill Home Economics club met at the' home of Mrs. Robert Darrah with Mrs. Winne Tate as co-hostess Tuesday. Plans for the Grange Fair were discussed. Each committee is 1 i . , . , , i asked to make the rules for his division. A motion was made and seconded that all entries must be! in place by 12 noon with the judg ing to start at 1 p.m. The Home Economics Club is in charge of the October Lectures program. Mrv- Robert Darrah and Mrs. W.- Krenz are in charge of the program. The September Grange display table will feature "Something I've Made" with Mrs. Verny Scott and Mrs. A. N. Doerfler in charge. iiinr ... ur nu . nn. . StH "V ? . u ,m.? gV , ... ' fThe October 10th meeting of the, Home Economics club will be held . at the Grange Hall as Clean up day with Mrs. erny Scott co-1 hostess. A covered dish luncheon will be served at noon that day. TV ..'II L f U . Births At Valley Hospitals Suirimaa N'twi Servlr TOMPKINS To Mr. and Mrs. Wayne A. Tompkins. Idanha, a daughter, Sept. 12 at Santiam Me morial Hospital. HARMS To Mr. and Mrs. Rich ard A. Harms, Idanha, a daughter, Sept. 12 at Santiam Memorial Hos pital. STEINKAMP To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Steinkamp, Aumsville Route 1, a son, Sept. 13 at San tiam Memorial Hospital. HYDE To Mr. and Mrs. Alton Hyde, Willamina. a soh, Sept. 12 at McMinnville Hospital. Sheridan PTA Leaders Named SUtrimin Newt Servlrt SHERIDAN, Sept. 15 Winer Melonuk, Sheridan PTA president, has announced his committee chairman for the ensuing year as follows: Program, Charles Jae ger; high school representative, Mrs. Henry Simonsen; room mother. Mrs. Glen Hopson; pub licity, Mrs. Fred Spooner.; refresh ments, Mrs. Allen Brown; publica tions. Mrs. Dale Cooley; mental hygiene. Mrs. Marvin Carkuff, and hospitality, Mrs. Allen Codding' ton. A reception for teachers Mon day night will be the first event of the season. HEALTH PROGRAM DUE TURNER, Sept. 16-Mrs. Manuel Keene, Turner health chairman, announced there will be a health meeting in the grade school aud itorium Tuesday, Sept. 18 at 7:30 p.m. All parents are urged to at tend this meeting and learn of the new health program which will in clude a doctor. The county health nurse will be there to explain the new program. AUTO CLUB ELECTS WILLAMINA. Sept. IS Semi annual elections were held by the Fencer's Hot Rod club of Willa mina at the last meeting, when Harvey Weber was elected presi dent; Dan Higgenbotham, vice president; Alan Thompson, secre tary; and Bob Galligher, trea surer. REFUGEES LEAVE TRIESTE, Sept. IS un One hundred and fifty refugees from Communist countries in the Bal kans left here in the past week for new homes in tht United States and Canada. Playgrounds Project for Mothers Club Statesman News Service HAZEL GREEN, Sept. 16-Mr. Lawrence Zielinski, president of Lthe Hazel Green Mother's Club, conducted the first meeting of the season Wednesday night at the schoolhouse with Mrs. M., B. Wamplcr serving as secreteary. " Room mothers appointed in Mrs. Katka's primary room were Mrs. A. P. Williamson and Mrs. Otis Phillips:- for Mrs. Burton's third and fourth grade room, Mrs. Lena Peterson, and Mrs. Bud Lowery. This mothers club sponsors the school hot lunch program and Mrs. Zielinski, Mrs. Wamplcr and Mrs. Mary Schafer, the cook, at tended the recent conference re garding school lunches held in Salem. The group will also continue working on the playground equip ment project. The next meeting will be on the first Thursday in October with Mrs. Elmer Mc Claughry and Mrs. Heubert Gallc as hostesses. Alarm System At Jefferson Huiriiman Ntwi Srrvtra JEFFERSON, Sept. 16 H. J. Albright, manager of the Pacific Telephone ti Telegraph company at Albany, was present at the September meeting of the Jeffer son city council this week. Ways and means of putting in an auto matic fire alarm system here were discussed. No decision will lbe made until the proposition can be investigated further. jasper Turnidge and Howard j Broxson, in charge of number ing the houses in Jefferson, asked for more volunteer help. Bills ordered paid were Henry Freeman, $8.60; Neptune Meters Co., $191.76: Pacific Telephone & Telegraph, $11.20; Pacific Power & Light, $242.07; P. C. Lulay Co., $53 68; Halprin Supply Co., $57; Lee's Texaco station, $9.76; San tiam Oil, $635; Kenneth Fors lund, $192.50; Marion County Civil Defense, $158.65; Industrial Accident commission, $6.78. Columbia street will be grav eled in the near future, and work will start on repairing the 111 IIIC HHLIILII Ul IIIC I IV naj ' ' Name in Grass Leads Week's 'Social Notes9 By JOY MILLER Iptters j...g were inscribed in fertilizer on a quarter-mile strip of S0UthwestPrn Wisconsin hill asj vear As (ne grass grew green so did Julie-S name And a siletlt lf not inarticulate romance, flourished, Last we,,ki Jlllje s parents an. jnounced in Mineral Point, Wis., ! that Julie had eloped with the 24-year-old lad who had so gloriously broadcast his true love's name. Another social note from hither and yon: In Ashevillc. N.C., Ma i rie Fish became engaged to James Bass. And the ladies weren't through with the news. In Howell, Mich., a woman driver shot through a picket fence, plowed into a veterin arian's office, missed the doctor by a foot and knocked his building eight feet from its foundation. "I meant to put it in reverse," she said. Then came the civil servants and their vicissitudes. A young letter carrier in Cleveland, Ohio, admitted in federal court he had burned 50,000 pieces of mail since April because delivering it would have interfered with the time he had set aside to play the pinball machines. A volunteer fireman in Benton Harbor. Mich., was so good at showing up first at the fire house when an alarm went off officials got suspicious. Then they found out he'd been turning in false alarms for "the pure finances of the enterprise. Volunteers get $3 for each run, false alarm or no, and he needed $25 to pay for his fireman's uniform. He turned in eight false alarms in two months 824. The trouble was, he got 30 days and a $30 fine, which is no progress at all. British Officer Killed hy Bedouin AMMAN, Jordan. Sept. 16 - A British army officer was shot dead today by a Bedouin trying to break into a storehouse at a Brit ish camp at Aqaba, at the head of the Gulf of Arabia. An official announcement said two Jordanian Bedouin Arabs tried to break into the storehouse. The British officer shot ind wounded one. The other fired back killing him. Small British military forces and installations, including infan try and armored units, still are stationed in Jordan under the 1948 Anglo-Jordan treaty. They were unaffected by the dismissal last March 2 of Lt. Gen. John B. Glubb, British commander of the Arab Legion, and. other British officers. S06.000 GOING BfJND NEW YORK, Sept. 16 i-The National Society for the Preven tion of Blindness has begun a search for "the unknown half-million" persons who are going blind and don't know it. The soo, 000 persons are victims of glau comaa disease which builds up pressure within the eye and grad ually takes eyeigh away. Indian .Riots Over American Rook Kill 18, Hurt 100 NEW DELHI, Sept. 16 uTt- India today counted 18 dead and more than 100 injured in two weeks of sporadic rioting over an Ameri can book which some Moslems claim defames the prophet Mo hammed. - Latest reports from Jubbulpore, central India, said one person was killed and four injured there in new outbreaks of violence yester day. The , total arrested exceeds 1,000, including 600 in Jubbulpore. The book is "Religious Leaders" published in India by a Bombay fftfffo OCT UIT- Fine Cotton Knit Boys' Pajamas Reg. 2.79 I 07 Sizes 4-18 Aitortod aolld colon with eontratt-, ma blatar strip rlbbtd crawack. Elastic waist; doubl gusstt crotch. "CHARGE IT" ON SRC mt .. mL U . ;;.r,,;:;. ";r;V;..-- I jj j "Charg. IT on SRC - & . 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Because this firm is headed by a Hindu, Moslem agitators charge the book is a Hindu attack on their religion. Cotton Corduroy a Suspender Pants Reg. 3.49 eO ftQ Sizes 3-10 . ... A.OU Doublt kn for tonotr wur., Su ton-on dotachabl iuipandort. Half botr waist, Navy, brown, gray. ' "CHARGI IT" ON SRC mm t ' T. .. if A . 1 1 1 Heads News Mechanics Western States, Canada, Alaska and Hawaii. Ernst Loebner of the Daily Olympian, Olympia, Wash., was elected vice president of the con ference's northwest division. Don ald Newhouse. Portland, Oregon ian, was elected secretary. John C. Benato, San Francisco Chronicle, was elected vice presi dent of the Northern California division, with Edward Maggi of a San Francisco printing plant chosen secretary. 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