Y Better Processing of Farm Products Urged by Governor Greater processing of Oregon farm products with a correspond ing increase in the promotion of their sales and better grading methods were urged by Governor Douglas McKay at the annual meeting of the Willamette Production Credit ussociation here TLTnn H :i v While sale of processed farm products should be the major project of the state, proper grad ing is also necessary to meet eompetition with the sale to be pushed under Oregon labels and not those of California, he said. Governor McKay also urged fur ther processing of lumber and the promotion of the flax in dustry which he described as "sick" at present. ' Loans have increased around $400,000 over the previous year with the volume last year $3 752,000 for an all-time high, it was reported by Phil Brandt, . secretary-treasurer. Member ownership of stock is now $231, v 400 with accumulated earnings ;' $167,203, an increase of $35,000. ; Membership last year was 967. i Directors "hope" to pay off J the remaining $50,000 of the $250,000 government loan re cived in 1934 with the debt ex pected to be reduced another $10,000 this year. Unless the situation changes the obligation may be liquidated in two or three years, he said. Also speaking at the meeting was Charles A. Sprague, Salem publisher and former governor. Music was provided by Willam ette university. John Ramage, Woodburn, was named president, succeeding E, W. McMindes, Astoria, E. A. Mc Cornack, Eugene, a holdover di rector, was named vice presi dent; Brandt, re-elected secre tary-treasurer, assisted by John G. Bryant and Wilma Burchell Other members of the board of directors are McMindes, Claude Buchanan, Corvallis and George Fullenwider, Carlton. Colder Opposes Power Stock Sale for Resale to Area PUDs Washington, Jan. 24 W) The long-standing controversy over public versus private ownership of utilities in the Pacific north west echoed anew Monday at a securities and exchange com mission hearing. The situation developed as the SEC began proceedings to de termine whether to approve or reject a proposal to sell control of Pacific Power and Light Co., of Portland, Ore. Brutis E. Calder, Jjoard chair man of Electric Bond and Share, New York holding Co., opposed public ownership of utilities. For this and other reasons, he said, he is against selling the Portland utility to a New York under writing syndicate headed by B. J. Van Ingen and Co., Inc. American Power and Light Co., a subsidiary of the corpor ation Calder heads, has asked authority to sell controlling in terest in the Portland utility. Under the proposal, the Van In gen syndicate would purchase 500,000 shares representing out standing common stock in Pa cific Power. Calder told the SEC that he understands the Van Ingen in terests plan to resell the Paci fic Power holdings to public utility districts in the northwest. "Now by all means, if we can get the right price," Calder stated, "I would prefer Pacific Power to go into private hands. He said he also opposed the Van Ingen offer on the grounds that American Power and Light could receive Immediate cash payment for the holdings if it accepted another proposition. He referred to an offer by Al len and Co. New York Invest ment company, which headed another syndicate to pay $15 000,000 cash for the Pacific Power stock. The Van Ingen offer listed a base price of $10,000,000 plus an added sum contingent on the aale of certain properties owned by Pacific Power. The total price, however, would not ex ceed $19,500,000. Calder said he is "totally in favor of the Allen offer" be cause of the readiness to pay cash and his belief that the Al len Syndicate will resell the property to private interests. "We can't afford to wait," he aid. "A bird in the hand Is worth two In the bush." The bond and share execu tive said the Van Ingen group had submitted a second offer to buy the Pacific Power stock for a minimum of $15,000,000 cash with the higher price still quot- Discovered How To HEAR AGAIN IN 20 SECONDS was in despair when I began to lose my hearing. Then one day in just 20 seconds I discovered how to hear again. Thanks to tha new Beltone Phantomold, there's NO BUTTON IN MY EAR. Discover how you, too, can hear again. Come in, pnone or write lor riuui ooouei mat tells ail tne lacta James N. Taft AND ASSOCIATES 228 Oregon Bldf. Salem, Oregon ; mi By H.S.T This is a sketch President Truman drew of himself when a delegation from the National Cartoonists society called at the -White House. It depicts the president peeping from behind a draw ing board. (Acme Telephoto) Council Tables Capitol Zone Change for Two Weeks Because of protests heard Monday night and the absence of Mayor Robert L. Elfstrom and Alderman Dan Fry, the city council tabled for two weeks the ordinance bill to change the zone classi fication in the capitol area. The ordinance was on the calendar for third reading and came up after a public hearing on the ed contingent on the sale of the Pacific Power properties. He said he still opposed the deal because of the public versus pri vate ownership angle. Earlier Howard L. Aller, pre sident of American Power and Light, said that the Van Ingen syndicate was the only group to make a firm offer to buy con trol of the Portland utility be fore the original agreement was signed to sell the stock. In contending that the nego tiated sale of the Pacific Power stock would best serve the in terest of his company and stock holders, Aller said the federal governmen tmay move "into a position of even greater domin ance in the Pacific northwest power situation." Directions Given for Donations to CARE Oregon donors to overseas re lief through CARE are advised to mail their orders direct to CARE, 20 Broad street, New York 5, N. Y as the Portland CARE office is being closed this week. During its slightly more than two years the CARE station in Portland has received nearly $170,000 in donations for food and textile parcels, much of this from Oregon communities out side of Portland. Declining receipts over the country for the overseas pro gram have made economies necessary in CARE operations, it was stated. However, CARE is definitely staying in business. Many critical areas still exist in western Europe and Asia, such as Greece. CARE -has de livered more than 9,000,000 par cels since the war, most of them containing food. At present, some emphasis is being shifted to the new book program to build up universi ties and trade schools in de vastated lands. Pensions Urged By Cyrus Ching Portland, Jan. 24 m The fed eral government's top labor con ciliator conferred today with AFL and CIO union groups, winding up a two-day session here. Cyrus Ching spoke to indus trial employers yesterday on la bor relations. He told them pen sions and welfare programs would continue to be a subject in union negotiations. He said it would not do to cry "social ism" in answering workers' de mands for social security. "It is important that leaders of industry recognize the prob lem ... as long as the problem is there, we shall hear from it," He said. Ching argued private industry cannot provide the only solution to the workers' need for old age care, but could sup plement the government's aims to extend social security ben efits. Question. Alderman Tom Arm strong moved that it be tabled and no objection was made. The bill would change to Class I residential zone four full blocks and a large fringe area in ad joining blocks. The effect of the change would be that all con struction except residences would be prohibited. The four blocks involved are those that the state capital planning com mission has recommended that the state buy, and the proposed zone change would be tempo rary until the 1951 legislature has a chance to act on the rec ommendation. In the public hearing Monday night all talks and letters were against the proposed change. A letter from Charles H. Heltzel was read in belief of C. O. Eng strom who has Zone II property that was changed about a year ago. W. E. Foren and wife, who have property in Block 88, one of the four, make a protest both in writing and verbally. The property, they said, Is leased for three years. Herman Rieck, who wants to construct a restaurant on prop erty located on Union between Summer and Capitol, sent in a written protest. Leston Howell, county coro ner and member of the under taking firm of Howell-Edwards, said he thought the proposed change was "as unjust as it would be to rezone any down town property," and he wanted to know if he would be barred from making future alterations and extensions of his business. W. I. Williams, architect, made a protest in behalf of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Riggs, who have property at Summer and Mar ion and plan an apartment proj ect. Alaska 'Long' Overdue as State Washington, Jan. 24 (U.R) Alaskan Delegate E. L. Bart lett Monday asked the house to give residents of Alaska "long overdue full citizenship" by ap proving a bill to make the terri tory a state. Chairman J. Hardin Peterson, (D., Fla.,) one of the house public lands committee joined Bartlett in urging passage of the bill. He said his committee ap proved it with only one dis senting vote. They were the first speakers on the measure when it came up for debate after Speaker Sam Rayburn gave it priority over a controversial fair employment practices commission bill. Bartlett told the house Alas ka has waited 83 years since its purchase from the Russians in 1867 to become a state. He argued that, by making Alas ka a territory and approving an "organize act" for it, congress indicated that Alaska would as some time become a statte. He said Alaska today is more populous than 17 other states were when they were admitted Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, January 24, 19507 to statehood. As for the argu ment that Alaska is not con tiguous to the United States, Bartlett said California was not contiguous to any other state when she was admitted. Gordon Gray to Go North Carolina Raleigh, N.C., Jan. 24 (IP) Secretary of the Army Gordon Gray has been chosen by a nom inating committee to be presi dent of the Greater University of North Carolina. Gray, 41-year-old publisher of the Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel, is an alumnus of the university. Gov. Kerr Scott, chairman of the university board of trustees, disclosed the nomination her Saturday night. NSSSn . MPS Foods gtt o flavor-lift whon you uit top-quality BttvHvf ipicti and statonings. Thtrt PrHy tltctd, oir woihtd . . . and ffth. To ittp-wp th flavor of tht most tommon-plaet mtals um a llttlt mora spte. makes the 1 The average urban family re ceives about twice as much cash income as the average farm or village family. Four islands in the Marianas Saipan, Guam, Rota and Tin ian are dotted with prehistoric burial sites evidently erected centuries before the islands were discovered by Magellan In 1521. COLUMBIA LONG PLAY RECORDS Featured in This Week's LIFE MAGAZINE Beethoven: Symph. No. 3 Philharmonic Symph. Orch. Bruno Walter. Cond, ML4228 $4.85 Cole Porter: KISS ME KATE By the Original Stage Cast ML 414D 4.85 I CAN HEAR IT NOW VOL i 1945-1949 Narrated by Edwin R. Murrow ML 4261 $4.65 Gershwin: SECOND RAFSODY FOR PIANO AND ORCHESTRA PRELUDES 1, 2. 3 Oscar Levant, Piano ML 2073 (3.85 YOUR MY THRILL Doris Day CL6071 $2.85 Downstairs, Oregon Eldg. STATE & HIGH Phone 38632 Harold & Dorecn Shogren 1'fNfc 1 ! id ASTHKiliMM Capital Drug Store State and Liberty "On the Corner" lif fa BAMAUS PEQUOT SHEETS! CANNON TOWELS! LACE DINNER CLOTHS! Nylon HOSE!, SHOES!, Short COATS! DRESSES!, BLOUSES! ,LINGERIE! Foundations!, Men's, Boy's Unders! LUGGAGE!, GIFTWARES!, ETC, ETC 7MM