Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, May 13, 1947, Page 9, Image 9

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    On Tour of Farms Livestock group at Louie Hennies farm. Turner, during recent Marion
County Livestock association tour. Left to right standing, Carl Booth, Arthur Gath, Eddie
Ahrens, County Commissioner Roy Rice, Henry Ahrens, County Commissioner Ed Rogers, Ed Gath,
County Judge Grant Murphy. Kneeling, Louie Hennies, tour chairman Claude Steusloff, associa;
tion president.
East Salem Pupils Offer
Annual May Musical Event
East Salem, May 13 Before an audience which filled the audi
torium of Swegle school the pupils of the school presented their
annual May day musical program. This was the second year that
a May queen has ruled.
The program opened with the
queen's processional and mem
bers of the court were: Queen,
Marilyn Kufner; royal prin
cesses, Phyllis Radley and
Geraldine Bales; train bear
ers, Barbara Reems and
Donna Symers; flower chil
dren, Viola Yost, Garry Frame
and Jon Young; crown bearer,
Donald Kufner; and attendants,
Loretta Robins. Barbara Hext,
Shirley Evans, June Hawry,
Pauline Otlosen, John Biles, Roy
Kennedy, Glen Straw, and
Douglas Pike, who was master
of ceremonies, and read the
queen's proclamation.
The program was one of many
folk dances by the pupils of the
primary room, the third and
fourth grades and fifth grade
girls; an Indian dance by fifth
and sixth grade boys; a broom
dance by primary pupils; a cow
boys' square dance by fifth and
sixth grade boys; square dances
by seventh and eighth grade pu
pils; a toy orchestra number by
third and fourth grade boys; a
drum majorette number, La
vonne Yost; a round dance by
seventh grade girls; a tap dance.
Sondra Allison; a duet. Donna
Mae Brandt and Nola Jean Zo
bel; a musical reading, Dick
Smith; an accordion solo, Shir
ley La Flemme; a Spanish dance.
Delores Symers; two special
songs by the primary pupils;
several songs by the chorus and
the closing number was tne
winding ot the May pole Dy pur
pils from the fourth, fifth and
sixth grades and this was done
without a misstep. At the piano
for the evening were Nola Jean
Zobel, Mrs. William Hensell and
La Vonne Yost. Graduation ex
ercises for the eighth grade will
be the night of May 29.
The Merry Minglers club of
East Salem held their regular
meeting Thursday afternoon at
the home of Mrs. Fred Scharf on
Lancaster Drive. There were
18 present for the social after
noon. The last meeting of the
club until fall will be held on
May 22 at the home of Mrs.
Robert Pickerel.
Several East Salem families
were in Silverton Sunday to see
the iris show and to Silver Creek
Falls for dinner or a lunch.
Large Timber Bid
Eugene, May 13 (Pi The
Hines Lumber company, Westfir,
was the only BKlcer yesterday
on a Willamette national for
est tract of 145,200,000 board
feet of timber offered by the
U.S. forest service.
The company bid the apprais
ed price of $715,892.10.
BE THRIFTY
AND SAVE
Have
Your Shoes Repaired
at
DEPARTMENT STORE
GUARANTEED
SERVICE
Leather or Composition
Half Soles
Heel Lifts, Toe Tips
While You Wait Service
Are your shoes run down at the
heels? Do they need soles or other
repairing? Don't worry Just
bring them to MILLER'S.
Out-of-Town Orders
Promptly Filled
Wool Legislation
Expected to Pass
United Stales wool growers
expect passage of wool bill SB
814, as amended by the house
;if representatives agriculture
- committee, commented R. A
Ward, general manager ot Pa
"ific Wool Growers, upon his
return from Washington, D.C.,
where he served on the legisla
tive committee of the National
Wool Growers association.
As now written wool bill SB
s 14 provides for the tennina
lon of the wool support price
jrogram under the commodity
redit corporation on December
II, 1948, pointed out Ward. The
'evel of wool price support is
'cfinitely fixed at the same CCC
rices as the government paid
ast year, Ward said. Growers
if western Oregon wools receiv
ea the top CCC prices through
Pacific Wool Growers and it is
expected that the 1947 prices
will net growers about the same
as in 1946. Members of Pacific
Wool Growers averaged about
48 cents a pound for all western
Oregon wools; while the grow
ers of bright, long, combing
wools received in the neighbor
hood of 50 cents a pound and
some even more.
Western Oregon members of
the Pacific receive individual
grade sheets showing just how
their wools grade and what each
of the grades of wool bring.
Ward said, "This is the fairest
method ever devised. Growers
of good wools receive the better
prices to which their wools arc
entitled. Average prices on a
pool don't mean much For ex
ample, one choice grade of wool
brought 54 cents, while cotted
wool brought 38 cents. The av
erage of these two grades is 46
cents but many growers had no
cotted and many growers receiv
ed above the average. Wool
pools sold and settled for at a
flat average price, as some are,
penalize the growers of good
wools whose prices are pulled
down to the average while the
growers of inferior wools have
their prices raised above true
market value."
MELLOW-FREEZE
Ice Cream
Quarts are only
SAVING CENTER
Salem & West Salem
33c
Ill
V
Guaranteed
WATCH
REPAIRING
3-Day Service
Out-of-town custom
ers may send in their
watches W nHll
mail estimate Defort
repairing.
Reasonable Prices
Corvallis May be
Scene of Picture
The Corvallis area is being
considered by the Selznick Stu
dios of Culver City, Calif., as
the locale of a motion picture to
be filmed this summer.
At the request of the produc
ers photographs of Oregon State
college, the Corvallis Country
club, business and residential
buildings are being forwarded
to the studios. Both old style
Mother's Day Guests
Unionvale Mr. and Mrs. Ar
nold Brown of Portland were
Mothers Day guests of their
mother, Mrs. C. J. Countiss.
They have completed setting a
small patch of loganberries on
Mrs. Counliss' farm.
Capital .Tnurnjal, Salem, Orepton, Tuesday. May 13, 1947 9
and modern homes are required
in the setting for the picture,
and pictures of both are being
furnished.
The Corvallis Chamber of
Commerce is assembling the pictures.
31
iitUiiiHiiyi
lfcre'i a quirk SAFE odor 1 it wmj io help 70a
keep your hums Ire from thru petit implj
tprinkle BU1IACU ation their iraila and la
cracki and rteritei.
BCIIACII known for aver 71 yean me al
lha bcit protection (toil thai oauy laathioaM
peiii.
In Hand? Sifter Cana SO op
fcUMACtf L
UtlKAl
MAKE YOUR CAR RUN LIKE
NEW WITH A
SHIM W 1 el I r H I I W II IV
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IH T l G jjj laJ TSgjti'f' LIBERTY and CENTER SALEM, ORE. .
J OF THE PULLETS'
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
I "Tjs-i 1-00 pu I
COMPLETELY TORN DOWN
AND REBUILT TO PRECISION
STANDARDS
WORN PARTS REPLACED
WITH GENUINE FORD PARTS
AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY V-8 100 H.P.
(6 Cylinder, 90 h.p. XV8 60 h.p.)
Also Model A and B Motors
? : . ill T;V
(I tf3
CROP DUSTING
BY PLANE
NEW LOW PRICES
$1.50
per acre
For over 40 acres
Experienced crop dusting pilots, flying ships capable of
carrying 1000 pounds per load.
Also commercial fertilizers spread at the low cost of
$1 per acre.
ORCHARDS, HOPS, FIELD CROPS, COVER CROPS
FASTER, MORE EFFICIENT PEST CONTROL
ACE FLYING SERVICE
' Box 109, Salem Airport Phone 6176
On
'Checkerboard Jamboree'
Fun for the Whole Family
((D
Willamette Valley's Most Powerful Station
1000 Watts
1390
on Your Dial
KEEP COOL
With Paramount
Evaporative Coolers
ALL SIZES
for Commercial
and Residential
Installations
D. E. COOPER & SON
540 HOOD PHONE 3603
HEATING APPLIANCES
WHEN A FAMILV LIVES
1 IN HARMOKIV all
THEIR AFFAIRS PROSPER,
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fill
Willards
is complete
Auto-Plate
Glass Installed
NASON Paints
Furniture
Kelly-Springfield
Tires
"You'll be a king without a throne
. . . unless you get that stalled motor started pronto"
GATEMAN: Better get this caboose on a sid
ing, your majesty; the Limited's comin'
through in three minutes. And take a tip
from me: next time fuel this tea kettle with
Chevron Supreme Gasoline. It's "climate
tailored" for this end of the line, balanced
to give you sure starts and zippy pick-up
in our climate.
I
HOT DOG KING: (later) Thanks for the tip
on Chevron Supreme. The old wagon's
got more pep now than a hot-shot freight
barreling down-grade, and I haven't heard
a ping since high-octane Chevron Supreme
went in the tank. What'll you have, old
timer, pickle or mustard? Your hot dogs
are on the house from now on.
It 's good going on
mis us mm nr. off.
SUPREME GASOLINE
There is no better gasoline at any price