Bridges Perjury Trial Recessed San Francisco, Jan. 19 U.R) The perjury-conspiracy trial of CIO longshore leader Harry Bridges and two other union of ficials was recessed until Mon day to allow the defense time to organize its case. Federal Judge George B. Harris granted the recess yes terday on the request of Chief Defense Counsel Vincent Halli nan. Hallinan admitted that the udden end of the government's case had caught the defense off balance. He said that unless the delay was granted he would not be able to call his witnesses in orderly fashion. Hallinan said that the three defendants would all take the stand during the defense's case. Bridges, Henry Schmidt and J. R. Robertson, all officials of the CIO International Long shoremen's and Warehousemen's union, are charged with false ly testifying at Bridge's 1945 naturalization hearing that the labor leader had never been a communist. FFA and 4-H to Compete Again Future Farmers of America and 4-H club boys and girls from all parts of the west ex hibiting at the 1950 Grand Na tional Junior Livestock Exposi tion In San Francisco April 1-6, will compete for the third con secutive year for $8,000 in sweepstakes scholarships posted by Standard Oil Company of California. The awards were announced by Porter Sesnon, chairman, who said that several more schol arships in varying amounts are to be posted soon by other or ganizations. The Junior Grand National will be held at the San Francisco-San Mateo Cow Palace and is expected to attract more than 1,500 FFA and 4-H club mem bers. The scholarships will be allo cated in the same manner as at the 1948 and 1949 expositions: Future Farmers of America One $2,000 four-year scholar ship and two $1,000 scholarships. 4-H Clubs One $2,000. four year scholarship and two $1, 000 scholarships. At least one of the 4-H awards must go to a girl contestant. Rules provide that contestants must be either seniors in high school, or not have graduated earlier than 1949. Recipients must enroll at any recognized college or university they may choose for the fall semester of 1950. Only one application will be accepted from each Future Farmer chapter or 4-H club. FFA applications must be signed by the applicant's high school principal and agricultural in structor; 4-H applications by the principal and county agent or local club leader. To be fully qualified, an ap plicant should be in the upper 40 per cent of his entire class not just in agriculture; should be an individual who would benefit most from advanced schooling; supervised projects and agricultural program should be outstanding. Personality, qualities of leadership and in terest as shown by participa tion in community and club ac tivities also will be considered. Pan American Offers Holy Year Pilgrimages A two week Holy Year all expense trip for $582 using both southern and northern gateways to Europe and including stop overs in three countries was an nounced today by John A. Moller district sales manager of Pan American world airways. Mr. Moller said that Pan American is the only airline able to offer this low cost tour of Rome, Nice, Paris and London all in the space of 15 days. Mr. Moller added that the pre sent tours which expire on March 16 have nothing to do with the Pan American agreement with the Felix Roma organization to provide year around low cost Holy Year tours through a chart er arrangement. The latter is still awaiting approval of Civil Aeronautics board. Guaranteed hotel reservations are provided throughout the tour which is offered In cooperation with leading travel agencies and is effective until March 16. Volunteer Firemen Will Repeat Play Hubbard The Ladies Aux iliary of the volunteer firemen met for their first 1950 meeting. Reported ill were Mrs. Verl Cochran, the president, Mrs, Marvin Barrett the secretary, and Mrs. Harold Penney. Mrs. Steve Ensign, Mrs. Lester Pul ley and Miss Louise Vonder- Ahe were initiated into mem bership bringing it up to 12. The Firemen and Auxiliary who presented "Even Stephen will present the play again in Canby on February 24 for the benefit of the Canby Fire de partment. Toys and treats were distributed to 29 children at Chirstmastime. I Ilii il wmmmm I iWll'llllliBi'lL ' i II ill Marion, Polk Cherry I Growers Will Meet The Marion-Polk cherry grow ers meeting will be held Friday, January 27, at 1:30 p.m. in May flower hall in Salem, according to N. John Hansen and D. L. Rasmussen, county extension agents in Polk and Marion coun ties respectively. The meeting will deal with problems in disease and insect control confronting cherry grow ers in the two counties. Scheduled on the program are Adin Steenland, extension plant pathologist and Robert Every, extension entomologist. The pro cessor's viewpoint on disease and insect control will be pre sented by a representative of the cherry industry, Hansen states. Recreation Theme for 4-H Leaders Meeting Recreation leadership and new games are to be the feature of the meeting of Marion county 4-H club Local Leaders' associ ation set for January 21 at the Mayflower hall. The short business meeting is to convene at 1 p.m. with Miss Theresa Dehler of Mt. Angel presiding. The business session will be followed by talks by C W. Smith and Miss Jessalee Mai lalieu. Smith, assistant director of extension service, Oregon State college, will talk on the Marion county 4-H program; Miss Mai lalieu, extension recreation spe cialist, in her talk will stress the types of games for small groups and games not requiring a lot of activity. During the afternoon there will also be a meeting of the Marion county delegates to the Western Oregon 4-H local lead ers conference. HowtoMakeYourWife DESERT EX Tell Her About f&dcU-Urip TO GLORIFY EVERY DESSERT! Tell your wilt the earn effort less war to sUmorizc even ritn (rlutdesKTU is with ceo Domical Reddi-wip. It's made with pore, rich cream it whips itself at tht touch of a finger. Desserts look better, taste better with Reddi- wip. There's do waste, no work, no bowl or beater to wash! Start using Reddi-wip today! mi tmi miiimii ii iiitii-'n hips PERT- r Before and After Here's proof it takes Imagination to be a dance director. The group in top photo looks like any group of dancing girls in practice togs but not to Lester Horton, He picked them as harem dancing girls for "Bagdad," Universal-International Technicolor film, put his imagination to work, and lower picture shows how they look on the screen. Same girls different costumes. They appear in "Bag dad" with Maureen O'Hara, Paul Christian and Vincent Price, ft""' 1 Oregon's Own JELLY JUDGES ... no difference between beet and cane sugar Let's face it Many years ago there was a difference between beet sugar and cane sugar. But that was over a generation ago. Today's beet sugar can't be surpassed by any other sugar in purity, sweetness, whiteness or fineness. Here's what one jelly judging expert says: "I've been judging prize winning jellies for 25 years at state and county fairs. Beet and cane sugar give exactly the same results in jelly making. I've found some of the nicest jellies I've tasted have been made with beet sugar." MRS. J. B. GRAHAM, Certified Food Judge Tri-Stall Fair, Minnetota State Fair, etc TY0UR BEST BUY IS BEET SUGAR Grown and produced right here in the West WESTERN BEET SUGAR PRODUCERS, INC. iggggggantggwtgiiiwggeiMigfiiggggigigiga and Only Sugar SAY..; Covering Cover Cuties' Cage Crew Is No Work! By OSCAE FRALEY Unlted PreM Sporu Writer) New York, Jan. 19 (U.PJ Wotta racket! Fearless Fraley covered the cover girls today, and got paid for it, too! Ordinarily sports Is a market where the movement is on muscles, the bigger the better, with the premium on perspir ation. Sound effects are sup plied usually in grunts and groans, whether the characters involved are busting a ball or just getting busted. But not the cover girls, a bas ketball team which perspires Chanel number five and draws involuntary cheers of "oohs" and "aaaahs." These kids can not only plop the ball through the basket but they look sharp doing it, and it's the skill, not the smiles, which bedazzle the opposition. There is, for instance, Dionae Audrey Erickson, a slick chick who models women's pretties, bowls an average of 160, and displays a toothpaste smile and a classy chassis. She bounces around the American girls baseball conference like a hopped-up Ty Cobb, yet was picked by a national maga zine as the AU-American girl and generally makes the AU American average man feel like a muscle-bound Methuse lah. Siding here on this quintet where beauty outweights the beast but science is as necessary as pigs in a sausage factory are four armsful of pulchritude who can pitch as well as they can Dose. You have to get Detier man B plus in the beauty department to even get a tryout with this club. Dot Whalen, a brunette honey who hails from Spring field, 111., and now lives in Chi cago, qualified easily in the classical section but she also ranks as one of the world's greatest women cage perform ers. "Teeny" Pctras is another of the classic converts who in the good old summertime slide around the girls' baseball dia monds of the midwest. "Teeny" is modestly advertised as the "world's greatest defensive in fielder." That may be a slight ly exaggerated statement. But old Fearless will say one thing for the little one. She's a lot prettier . than Slats Marlon, Pee-Wee Reese or Phil Riz zuto and their batting aver ages aren't so hot either. The center of this curvaceous crew is Ellie Mulen, a six foot school teacher from New York. every' Tr Basketball aside, with something like this teaching the readin', writin' and arithmetic, the old little red school house might have turned out something be sides wacky sportswriters. In between the halves of their some 40 odd games the cover girls put on a show that has Min- sky's and Larry MacPhail's pre- game model shows backed right off the boards. Take Miss Erickson, a past time which, I assure you, comes under the distinct head ing of pleasure. She twirls the baton, tap dances while skipping rope, pitches base balls and puts and dropkicks a football over the backboard with or without shoes. Can they play basketball? Last year they beat the Georgia Tech football team by three points. Just in case anybody cares! Funds Requested for Access Road Work President Truman has re quested congress to provide lunas (or a substantial access road construction program, for reforestation and stand lm provement and for an expanded forest management program on the O & C lands in western Oregon administered by the Bureau of Land Management, it was announced this week by Daniel L. Goldy, regional ad ministrator. Goldy stated that the Presi dent's budget calls for an ap propriation of a million dollars for new road construction the fiscal year 1951. He stated T-B0NES Choice Cuts From Eastern Ore. Hereford 59ib. phoM I mjJ a . I DJM M LI L 8 S-6489 P-X ' I Stats St. SLICED BACON LITTLE PIGS COTTAGE PORK CHOPS ii A iiC We Make Our Own IIMIVW From the Finest FRESH DAILY! 1".'. Grain Fed Porker. 39c b. 45c ib. 59c lb. LOCKER BEEF IMS FOOD MARKET 1288 State Street PEACffi Dill Pickles Bread 1 Vl lb. CATSUP T 1- I..!. Del lUmUlU JUHe 46 Bananas u. 15c I Eggs POTATOES -!9-"2ty PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS.-FRI.-SAT.-JAN. 19-20-21 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., CAR TUNES HOW 0 IT TMI ftf L OV YHf KOAft TtfT YOUH MAKE CLHTU WHCM HUVIN4 SLOWLY AN. RO OTMIft CAM AH NIAA that the total O & C program called for the construction of approximately 400 miles of tim ber access roads to tap an es timated eight billion feet of old growth O & C timber which is currently inaccessible. It is es timatcd that roads to be built or started with the 1951 funds will, open up O & C timber worth nearly 20 million dollars at present stumpage prices. Sheridan Bank Grows Sheridan The U. S. National bank again leads the state in total year-end deposits. Total deposits for the Sheridan branch for 1949 were $2,812,505.21. ac cording to B. C. Swails, man ager. Twenty years ago, in 1929, deposits were $307,301.54 at the end of the year. HAMBURGER SAUSAGE Hormel't Finest Cure. Full Slices One small lot left at price. Buy now and ULM Hunts Yellow Cling in Heavy Syrup No. 2 'i Tins No. 2'i P Jars ea. ZjC Tide loaf 19c Tuna DENNISONS Large Bottles Monte 23c I Cabbage u. 5c ox. cans Thursday, Jan. 19, 1950 17 Safety Group Meets Jan. 20 Initial meeting of the gover nor's industrial safety advisory committee will be held on Janu ary 20, starting at 9:30 a.m. in the Gold room of the Hotel Portland, Portland. Purpose of the meeting is to acquaint the members with the nature and extent of their new field and to perfect an organ ization to spearhead a campaign to eliminate accidents in Indus try. All members of the commit tee are expected to attend. They are: Prof. William Engesser, Corvallis; Elmer McClure, Mil waukie; Mrs. R. H. Walter, Gust Anderson, Ray Carr, E. H. Cros by, Manley Wilson and Otto R. Hartwig, all of Portland; W. E. Kimsey, commissioner of labor, and R. M. Evenden, di rector, accident prevention divi sion, both of Salem. Paul E. Gurske, chairman of the state industrial accident commission and ex-officio chair man of the committee, will pre side. T. Morris Dunne, chair man, state unemployment com pensation commission, and L. O. Arens, commissioner of the un employment and industrial ac cident commissions, will par ticipate. Band Program Deferred Amity The mass band clinic and contest scheduled for Sat urday has been cancelled due to bad driving conditions. The ev ent will be rescheduled at a la ter date. BEEF ROAST Choice Cuts From Eastern Ore. Hereford 39c LB. this save. 39c lb. Phone 2-9237 25c Washing Powder Flakes con 19c 2 25' 45cib.