Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 16, 1949, Page 16, Image 16

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    .,Mt .v.- ,. ... 1 1 flat J
Squeeze Play One person was killed and four others in
jured when the driver of this Lincoln coupe tried to cut in
between the retaining wall (left) and the trailer truck (right)
In Washington, D, C, The coupe was crushed like an egg
shell. (Acme Telephoto)
East Salem Groups Plan
Many Meetings This Week
East Salem, Nov. 16 A number of social meetings are sched
uled for East Salem communities this week.
The Capital City Babbit Breeders association meets at the Lions
Den in north Salem Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock. Nominations
for officers for the new year will be opened and will be received
bv the secretary until the De-
cember meeting.
The Associated clubs of Mid
dle Grove community will meet
at the school house Friday night
at 8 o'clock. A program has
been planned by Mrs. John Van
Laanen. Mrs. John Anglin and
Mrs. George Hardy.
Lansing Neighbors Garden
club will hold their November
meeting Thursday in the home
of Mrs. Joe Zajic. The date of
the meeting Is being changed be
cause of Thanksgiving on regular
date.
The Merry Minglers will meet
Thursday afternoon in the home
of Mrs. John Ackerman at 1
o'clock.
The Jolly Neighbors meet Fri
day afternoon in the home of
Mrs. Ray Bernardy on Brown
road.
. uni southern
ye represented
ell as a number
c unities.
.o of southern Cal
ifor. send six entries.
Juo .. will be in charge of
J. V. Fordon, professor of ac
counting at the University of
Washington who is an exper
ienced fancier and judge.
A banquet will conclude the
show at which time ribbon tro
phies and diplomas for the sea
son will be awarded.
Oswego-Lake Grove
Schools to Merge
Portland, Ore., Nov. 16 U
Voters at special elections last
night approved an Oswego-Lake
Grove union high school district.
The new union high school
district approved 1099-355, cre
ates a union high school board
and clears the way for construc
tion of a new high school.
Swegle Road Garden club was
held in the home of Mrs. Daniel
Casey. Instructions in the mak
ing of corsages was given by
Mrs Dan Stauffer with each one
present having one made. Mrs.
Alfred Pauli had arranged a
'Miniature Barn Yard" scene
for her subject, "Dish Gardens.'
In it were the wishing well, the
geese, horse, etc., with the flow
er and tree border.
Attending were Mrs. Bryan
Garrison, Mrs. Clinton Kennedy
Mrs. Floyd King, Mrs. Ross
Bales, Mrs. Melvin LaDue, Mrs.
O. P. Bond, Mrs. Clifford Yost,
Mrs. Homer Conklin, Mrs.
George Quinn, Mrs. Paul, Mrs.
Stauffer, the hostess, Mrs. Har
old Holler and Miss Dorothy
Bond. Mrs. Bales acted as sec
retary in the absence of Mrs,
Oscar Winle.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Wigle
were in Brownsville at the home
of her father over the week-end.
Auburn Mothers club meets
Friday afternoon at 2 o'cIocK at
the school house for the regular
monthly meeting.
Garden Road Neighbors club
meets Friday afternoon in the
home of Mrs. Glenn Larkins on
Park avenue.
The November meeting of the
NEW MAPS
RURAL ROUTE MAPS
!V'xii" 25e
21"x25" $1.00
SALEM AND WEST SALEM
AND VICINITY
ZV'xZi" $1.00
41"x45" $5.00
Mail Remittance to MEL
PROPP, Land Surveyor
341 State Street, Room 8,
Salem, Oregon or any Book
Store
Seek End to Box
Car Shoriaaes
Portland, Nov. 16 W A cam
paign to end future boxcar short
ages along Southern Pacific
tracks was announced last night
by a newly formed western Ore
gon shippers car supply commit
tee.
R. E. Titus, executive vice
president of Western Forest In
dustries Association, said com
mitteemen are being elected in
five districts. He said cannery,
fresh fruit and grain shippers
had been asked to join the lum
bermen.
Titus said this year's situation
should be eased soon, but the
committee was looking to the
future years. "We feel we need ,
a permanent solution to the1
shortage that seems to recur in
Western Oregon every fall," he I
said. j
Elections of committeemen
were under way in Grants Pass,
Roseburg, Eugene, Corvallis and
northern Oregon districts, he
said. A meeting is planned for
tomorrow night at Coos Bay by
the Chamber of Commerce,
Titus said the committee
would carry its case to the In
terstate Commerce Commission.
Rep. Harris Ellsworth, Roseburg,
had said earlier this fall be
Viking Annual
ueismgn .taring
Salem high school's 1949 Vi
king Annual recently received
word of a first class rating in'
the National School Press asso-'
ciation contest conducted by the
University of Minnesota at Min-'
neapolis, I
With comments such as "very
neat and "clear cut, the an
nual missed being "All Ameri
can" by 30 points. Out of a pos
sible 4.000 points the Viking re
ceived 3,970 points.
Out of 60 schools judged in
the same class, only nine re
ceived "All American."
Last year's editor was JoAnn
Dewitt and Don Young was
manager. Both are now attend
ing Oregon State college.
Mrs. Marjorie lliatt is the edi
torial adviser and Preston
Doughton is the business adviser.
had tumbled about ten feet aft
er hit mother, Mrs. H. W. Lar
son had removed a grill while
cleaning.
'He was screaming blood v
murder, and I knew I couldn't
get him out myself," the mother
explained when she called the
fire department.
Lew Wallace Elected
Portland, Nov, 16 Lew
Wallace, former democratic na
tional committeeman, was elect
ed president of the Jackson Club
of Oregon last night. New vice
presidents from the tour con
gressional districts are; Albert
Kemmer, Beaverton; Eleanor
Carrico, Burns; Ward Cook,
Portland, and Lester Mcthes,
Gold Hill.
Capital Journal. Salem, Ore., Wednesday, Nov. IS, 1949if
Child Rescued From
Furnace Air Shaft
Portland, Nov. 16 Wl Two-year-old
Gaylen Larson was able
to smile today for photographers.
But for a while yesterday he
was screaming a lungful at the
bottom of a furnace air shaft.
Firemen worked for 15 min
utes to pull him out of the bot
tom of the cold air shaft. He
would ask the ICC to check into
boxcar allotments for Oregon.
Lumber mills and some grain
and fruit shippers have been
complaining of the shortage of
cars.
Jobs as Portland
Cops Go Begging
Portland, Ore., Nov. 16 U.
i Portland s civil service board to
jday said it couldn't understand
i why the increasing number of
unemployed workers in Multno
mah county wouldn't apply for
jobs as cops.
The board said it had vacan
cies on the city force.
Rose Festival June 1-11
t Portland. Ore.. Now. 18 tin
The 42nd annual Rose Festival
will be held in Portland June 7
1 1, its organizers said today.
M f V M lJ . 1
1
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a 1
Tires Expertly Mounted fl
I BATTERIES
Free Inspection Service I J AXTI freeze
Behind the Main Store the Parking Lot
tjiiw. m&uff ioei'
SEARS
iil N. CapiM SI.
Phone 1-tlSl
r i-h
1 hi
I fin
THE NEW "CELLOPHANE-LIKE" FINISH FOR
FLOORS - WALLS - AUTOS FURNITURE
o4 tnish ffcat w mm crack hip m pH SmVUXt
Salem Lighting & Appliance Co.
235 N. High Dial 3-9412
n
0LD-T.
eCr-- ft, ,
s. ai -mm MJ
" MELLOW'"5 fl,i6S HMtn
OH H0RS6
YOU WAW 'J
Imperial h mode by Hiram Walker. Blended whisker. 86 proof
70 gain neutral spirits. Hiram Walker as Sons Inc., Peoria, Illinois,
I to kp Mm pttt bntkwH od pin.
e s
KVENIErJCCS
Kep your closets 90 ftoft
thoy practically
hand out your dothw
Sol re tout closet probkms tfa
imple. inexpensive way
install K-Veotences. They
d&mbie doc capacity, tart 1
cleaning and pressing biUs. mmk '
psonaoeoctf convert toot chat
tered, outmoded de$S mm
sm trt, modem cbessmg on
There's nothing bke K-Vea-iexKcs
fix ck9ct cocTeotcacai
over, km, toa
These Oregoniani are behind three grow
ing enterprises in widely different fields.
By taking advantage of Oregon oppor
tunities to better themselves, they help
make the whole state grow creating
more jobs, products, services and more
opportunities for all of us in Oregon. To
make it possible for individuals to more
readily help themselves, constructive
banking services are made widely avail
able by banks in the First National Group.
Thus we help Oregon grow family by
family, farm by farm and business by
business. We invite you to come in soon
end tell us how we can help you.
I 1
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l'ft TTTxf - 1 If if!' j
2 MAKES TANKS AND OREGON JOBS
Approiriitisteljr JO sheet metal workers, michinhfs
and welders are busily it work in the large Oak
Street Tank & Steel plant in Aihland. This Oregon
business was born in 1940 when Hirrjr R. Morris
(above) began making oil storage tanks in his
father's garage to meet local demands. Today
Morris' company makes tanks of all kinds, special
izing in septic tanks; manufactures a motor steam
cleaner for vehicles, and builds metal specialties.
The firm's aluminum rowboaB an popular os
Rogue River Valley streams and lakes. For his com
pany's banking needs. Morris u constructive
services of the Ashland Branch of First National,
- -IENKS HATCHERY STILL GROWING
When Mr. and Mrs, Enoch M. tenia (righ) started
a chicken hatchery in 1910 on the pioneer Jrnks
family ranch near Tangent, their kerosene incu
bators held 250 eggs. Today, with sons Marlowe
(left) and Mtlvin in charge, the hatchery's auto
matic electric incubators take 213,000 f ( 1 2 torn)
at I setting. There are 8600 chickens at the Tangent
breeder ranch and 10,000 turkeys on 300 acres near
Corvallis. Quality chicks and poults are shipped as
far as Hawaii. The jenks'. First National customers
at Albany, consider services of the bank's agricul
tural field men especially valuable in helping their
buiiness and Oregon grow.
O SONS iAND MfUMG BUSINESS
A flour milling business founded at Island City In
1896 by the late Edward E. Kiddle continues to
grow with the Grande Ronde Valley it serves.
Present-day operators of the Pioneer Flouring Mills
are the founder's sons, Fred E, Kiddle (left) and
Mrrton W, Kiddle. Now there is a second mill at
i nion ; elevators and grain warehouses at ! m M e r,
Elgin and La Grande; and pes processing plants at
Island City and Elgin. Approximately 20,000,000
Kunds of Oregon flour, alone, is milled annually,
nking services of the LaGrande Branch of First
National play an important part in the Kiddles'
extemive operations.
SALEM D RANCH
NATIONAL BANK
NOMT... ALL-DAY IAN KINO
tO to I, M4r tfcra tmttdmf
Of PORTLAND
lain Miiiil rent imiMti eeMOiatioe
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