i. or. RlfM' 4 Villi I . n C-qT tor -rr :, C. Kobby Gets His Mall Little did four-year-old Bobby Byers of Phoenix, Ariz., realize the reception his request for letters would receive. The boy, who doctors say doesn't have long to live, suffers from cancer. A short time ago his desire lor cards and letters became known. Mailman Arthur Hammon watches as Bobby opens a package, one of 3,000 pieces of mail which have arrived from throughout the nation. LATEST: 2,341 POUNDS OF CHERRIES Ex-Champ Cherry Picker Challenges New Record The Dalles, Ore., Aug. 2 U.B world champion cherry picker, of 2341 pounds set by Walt Bailey He racked up this belief by challenging Bailey to a contest "anywhere, this year or next." "I'll take him on regardless of the variety of fruit," he declared after reading of Bailey's ex ploit. "Frankly, my feelings are a little hurt." Wooton's previous recora of 2,168 pounds was set in 1946 at the Roy Webster orchard in Hood River valley. In 1947 the East Salem Social Events Take Interest This Week East Salem. Aug. 1 Social activities in East Salem the past week included showers for brides-to-be, birthday parties for children and one sewing club luncheon M PhnrlpR A. Rarnev hon-." ored the ninth birthday of her son, Paul, with a party at their Monroe avenue home. His guests were Paul and Sharon Suran, Jerald and Orval Prunk, Paul Richey, Don McLain, Ken ny and Donald Jacobe, Hershel Mays and Kay and Ann Barney. After the refreshment hour Mrs. Barney took them all to Auburn school yard for a ball game. Mrs. Arthur f" to well enter tained several Monroe avenue neighbors at her home. Guests were Mrs. S. M. Hueselman, Mrs. Charles A. Barney and Ann, Mrs. Henry Hanson, Mrs. Clar ice Mahoney, Mrs. Stuart Johns, Mrs. Glenn Moody and Glenda Lee, Miss Hazel Stowell, Mrs. Wilfred Miller and Freddy, Mrs. Bernard Kenny and Cathy, Mrs. Loran Richey, Mrs. Walter Lew is, Miss June Stowell and Mrs. C. R. Doane from Los Angeles, Calif. A gift was presented to Mrs. Moody for her young son Dennis, who is two months old As honored guest Mrs. Moody poured at the luncheon. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hanson were Sunday guests at the Aug ust Ramberg home in Canby. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Cuthbert son were guests Sunday at the Auburn community home of Mr and Mrs. Walter Lewis. Mrs. Clarice Mahoney is a newcomer on Monroe avenue. She is taking care of her moth er, Mrs. J. Hanson, who is living at the sister's home, Mr. and Mrs. Jess E. Smith. They have recently purchased the Blanken ship home and are away on a vacation in Arizona. Miss June Stowell of Auburn was a guest the past week in the Dr. I. Mansfield home in Portland, visiting their daughter, Marcia. , Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hickey of Sacramento, Calif., were "Jwf the Ticket" for Thrilling Vacatlontl I eor.tr... .. for you. . tj ou avo ui - Yo'w Co.t! You'll b. low..j - little com- hhum -" - - . plet toura cow. re no - "Fl folderl See Agent. Tr.v.1 Taylor St.. Portuna hone 2-2421 i Henry M. Wooton, dethroned thinks he can better the mark at La Grande last week, slim, wiry Stockton, Cal., mi grant fruit worker set an apple picking record that still stands 415 boxes in a Wenatchee Wash., orchard. In an apple contest at Hood River in 1946 Wooton picked 379 boxes in 14 hours. "Bailey dropped out of the contest at the 138-box mark," the Califor nian declares. house guests the past week in the C. A. Barney home on Mon roe avenue. Mr. Hickey is the nephew of Mr. Barney. Gustave Bahnsen has sold his home on Lancaster drive and is moving to the home of his broth er, east of Four Corners. Man Electrocuted Dallas, Texas, Aug. 1 VP) Bobby J. John, 27, was electro cuted yesterday while working on a home-made television set with an electric drill. Officers said the drill apparently shorted out in John s sweaty hands. 100 to 1000 OR MORE Auto or Personol COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN INCORPORATED Salem Agency: 460 N. Church St, Tel. WANT-AD eT I read Capital Journal Want Ads because I am looking for a house to rent, and I find many good bargains in the Produce and Miscellaneous Ads. Mrs. James B. Buchanan, Rt. 2, Box 411, Salem, Oregon. CapitalfflJournal Youth Project Good 2 Years Hollywood, Aug. 1 (U.R) Co medians Bur Abbott and Lou Costello announced that their Youth Foundation is assured of staying open until August 1, 1951, despite failure of a char ity lightweight title fight to pay off the foundation's mortgage, The screen and radio comics sponsored the Ike Williams- Enrique Bolanos championship bout here July 21 in hopes of raising enough money to pay off the $83,000 mortgage on the Lou Costello, Jr., Youth Foundation The fight netted only about $18,000 profit for the founda tiorv. But Ray A. Myers, who heads the building firm which holds the mortgage, said he had ac cepted $15,000 now with the balance to be paid off in $500 monthly payments until August, 1951, when th,e comedians will pay off the rest of the mortgage. The monthly payments won't start until December, "I am satisfied that they did their very best to make the fight a financial success and 1 realize that the illness of Cos tello made it necessary for Ab bot to carry most of the burden alone," Myers said. "I am hap py that I can see my way clear to enable these men to save the property from foreclosure at this time." The comedy team said they did not know where they would get the rest of the money but they were sure of one thing: "It won't come from any more fight promotions." Nearly 20,000 tons of tobacco was gathered in Mexico last season. 34168 WONDERS Lack of a phone was Wsj no problem to a man who thought the piano Harold Mitchell offer- W ed for sale in the Claa- t'x silled section ofaBre- merton (Wash.) news- y2f& paper might be Just fiia what his church need- f-M ed. He used his am- :fxf ateur radio set to get iSpf a message to Mitchell 'My to hold the piano until m a church committee Mw 1' Wor HTa 2-59 II could inspect it. Classified Advertising's popularity stems from Re- '$& ault-Action embracing ev- 0; conceivable kind of fjf personal and commercial f' need. ' DOESN'T LIKE MEN Kiki, Martini-Drinking Cat, On Wagon Back in U. S. By HARMAN W. NICHOLS Washington U.R) Kiki, an old foreign toper, came to the land of plenty today and promptly went on the wagon. Kiki, to be real plain about it, couldn't stomach our martinis. Not sweet enough. Kiki, who was raised on gin and vermouth, is a cat. A fugi tive from the back alleys of Old Matrid; a gray and white rascal of doubtful parentage and the property of Mrs. Winifred Hunt er, a 52-year-old widow who has just returned from an official tour of duty in Spain. Mrs. H. as of now is waiting for re-assignment, after 26 years of foreign service with our gov ernment. When we walked into the Hunter-Kiki hotel room for a chat, the lovely Mrs. Hunter, who looks half her age, said "Be careful." This reporter disre garded the warning and has a couple of Kiki's toothmarks on his left arm to prove it. Mrs. Hunter, after she band daged the damage, explained that 1) Kiki doesn't like men. 2) He is no sissy. There was no argument on either count. Before she told me about the drinking habits of her pet, Mrs. Hunter admitted there had been trouble before over Kiki, who came to this country billed as a "Martini-Drinking, Boxing Tab by." "I taught him to box," she said. "He was raised around chil dren, and so I made him some boxing gloves so he wouldn't scratch the little ones." Why gasoline costs Stat and Approx. Gasotln f edtral Aw. hrt. to arn pr ton per hourly lOgolloM gallon! . gallon wago ptuttai 1922 24f0 . & .52 5 1939 13 6f0t .63 3 1949 20fo $1.37 2 tAverage SO U. 5. elites. Includes ell taxes except Federal and State highway taxes.) 'Average for 48 States. U. S. Bureau of tabor statistics for foctory workers. 1. The price of gasoline today is higher than it was in 1939. But it actually costs you less. In 1939, for example, 10 gallons of "regular" gaso line cost the average U. S. factory worker 3 hours' pay. Today, 10 gallons of considerably better "regular" gasoline costs him less than 2 hours' pay. 4. Are the industry'! raw-material, tax and other"cost-of-doing-business" expenses lower? Quite the contrary. Are the owners taking less profit? No, dividend payments have been run ning higher, although they average only about 3H of gross sales and represent a return of 4lA on invested capital. What is the answer then? Simply this: greater efficiency and lower costs through more and better "tools" refin eries, terminals, pipe lines, drilling rigs, etc UNION OIL COMPANY Well, when Mrs. Hunter and Kiki landed in New York in the middle of July the cat demon strated both of his talents. Ship reporters wanted pic tures for the papers. Kiki was accommodating enough to lap up a Martini a sweet one like he was accustomed to in Spain. But he got a little unhappy with a reporter from the New York Herald Tribune who got a little too folksy. "One of Kiki's gloves had blown overboard, but I had one on his left paw for safety," said Mrs. Hunter. "Kiki is right pawed and he could have been mean about it. But he is a gentleman. He let the man have a good one with his left, or gloved hand. The man did not appreciate it." If Kiki says anything at all, except "meow," he says it in Spanish, since he understands very little, if any, English. Kiki makes a catline for un der the bed when Mrs. Hunter says "malo malo." That means "bad bad." Or to a cat, "spanky, spanky." "Quieta," spoken to the pus hy means about what it says. Quiet! "Tamo" means "take it" or "eat your supper." Kiki knows. ... But back to the martinis and OF CALIFORNIA INCOIPOIAMB IN CAMIOtNIA, OClOllt 17, H0 Xoung President Paul A. Wagner, 31, of Chicago, takes over the presidency of Rollins college, Winter Park, Fla., Au gust 1, as one of the youngest college heads in U. S. how Kiki developed the habit, Mrs Hunter pitched a cock tail party in Madrid soon after she got her alley cat as a gift from a Spanish princess. A gentleman guest came rushing into the room and said that Kiki was stealing his martinis. "I had trouble with the cat ever after," she said. On the way over here, Kiki made sort of a nuisance of him self running up and down the bar, lapping up the dregs. He's cured now, though. These American martinis are too tough. Almost cured, that is. While I was talking to Mrs H., somebody stole my olive. you less today than it 2 In 1 939 one bushel of wheat would buy the average U. S. farmer 3H gallons of gasoline. Today, one bushel will buy him 7.9 gallons. And what's true of the factory worker and the farmer is true to a large extent of most other gainfully employed people in this country. 5. Since 1939 the industry has not only plowed back every cent of profits after dividends into enlarged and improved facilities but has bor rowed additional money as well all in order to meet the increased demand for petroleum prod ucts and to improve efficiency. In the last 10 years Union Oil -in addition to $178,000,000 used for replacement has spent $80,000,000 on "plant" improvement and expansion. Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Walker Gets Seattle Video Independence, Aug. 1 Bev Walker, owner of the Independ ence Electric, can receive the Seattle stations on his Strom-berg-Carlson television set. He stated that this is the fartherest southern point a set has received a Seattle station. Normal reception is limited to about a five mile radius at the present, but between 5:30 and 10 p.m., he has received boxing matches, cartoons, and other features from a distance of 200 miles. When the four Portland sta tions are In operation, Independ ence and this territory will have wonderful results with tele vision, Walker stated. Rifa Hayworth Khan Expect Stork Visit Deuville, France, Aug. 1 (U.R) Movie Actress Rita Hayworth has gone into virtual seclusion to await the stork expected some months from now, her servants reported today. They said the Hollywood dancing star now confines her public appearances to 15 min utes daily, when she rolls mar bles on the beach with her daughter and step-sons. They would not reveal the date when Miss Hayworth ex pects her baby, but it was re ported that she has a suite re 3. In other words, the price of gasoline has gone up less than wage rates and less than the price of most other commodities. Consequently, it actually costs you less in "real" dollars than it cost you in '39. What's the reason for this? Are the industry's labor costs down? No. Oil workers are among the highest paid wage earners in the country. 6. 64 of this came out of profits that were left over during those years after dividends. The rest was borrowed. So oil company profits have a very real bearing on keeping down the cost of gasoline to you. For most profits go right back into improved facilities that mean greater efficiency and lower costs. This eric, sponsored by the people of Union Oil Company, it dedicated to a discussion of how and why American business functions. We hope you'll feel free to send in any suggestion or criticisms you have to offer. Writs: The President, Union Oil Company, Union Oil Building, Lot Angeles U, California, Monday, August 1, 1949 IS served at the American hospital in Paris for some months frnm now. However, the hospital r- lused to confirm the report. The glamorous movie queen and Indian Prinno Alv ITh were married last May. Peru is encouraging the mak ing of woolen carpets by hand. MAKES 10 BIG COLD DRINKS r A Your Fur Moths Will Be Feeling Mighty Low! when you take your tur to STANDARD Clenners 4s Dy ers! Yes . . . your beat Insurance against moth damage 1b have STANDARD properly clean them before you store them I For fast, pickup service DIAL 38779 today 1 We give S&H Green Stamps. For Better Appearance" Standard Cleaners & Dyers 362 N. Commercial did in 39 Ml riowEB coir 1 450 N. Ckarck St. y