10 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, January 31, 1950 McKee Favors Sale of PPL to Group Who Would Keep Intact By W. KENNETH HAYES (United Preu Financial Writer) New York, Jan. 31 U-R Paul B. McKee, president of Pacific Power & Light company, told the United Press today that he believes the interests of both the area served and the stockhold ers would be met best by the sale of that utility to the Allen 8i Company group. The Securities & Exchange commission will open a new hearing in Washington Wed nesday morning to decide whe ther control of Pacific Power shall be sold to the Allen Syn dicate or to one headed by B. J. Van Ingen & company. McKee made it clear that the reason he favors the Allen bid of $15,000,000 cash in opposi tion to the Van Ingen bid of $10,000,000 cash, plus contin gent additional payments which may be as little as $4,500,000 or as much as $9,500,000 is that the Allen group intends to con tinue the company as a going integrated company; whereas the Van Ingren group plans to sell the properties piecemeal to various interests, some of them public power groups. If Allen & company is permit ted to buy Pacific Power & Light, McKee pointed out, it wil! distribute the common stock of that utility to investors in the territory served. If .another group should come forth with a better bid than Al len & company though this is unlikely, so far as he knows he would favor it, McKee said, provided it also called for con tinued operation of the North west Utility company as a go ing unit. While he will be present at the SEC hearing which starts in Washington Wednesday, Mc Kee revealed, he does not know whether or not he will be called unon to testify. However, if he does, he will endorse the Allen bid. The hearings, he predicted, will probably only take a day or so, and it seems likely that the SEC will make a prompt de cision. He bases this expecta tion, he said, on the fact that American Power & Light com pany which owns all the out standing common stock of Pa cific Power & Light, for which the two banking groups are bid ding plans to distribute the proceeds from the sale of that stock on Feb. 15. Pacific Power ' & Light, a utility serving the hearts of the states of Washington and Ore gon, has about 140,000 custo mers. Employes number ap proximately 1,400, and gross annual revenues approach $18,- 000,000. It is in direct competition with public power only In The Dalles, Ore., and In the Hood River county rural area of the same state. Gross revenues from those areas amount to only about 2 per cent of the utility's total annual income. Prominent cities served In clude Yakima, Sunnyside, Day ton and Walla Walla, Wash., and Portland, Hood River, Pendle ton, Enterprise and Bend, Ore. Naval Aviation Plan Offered Responsibility for the naval aviation cadet procurement program in the area of Oregon and Washington west of the Cascades was assumed Wednes day by the Naval Air Rese.-ve Training unit at the Sand Point Naval Air Station, Seattle. Captain A. E. Buckley, USN, commanding officer of NARTU, will direct the procurement pro gram in the northwest. Appli cants must be between the ages of 18 and 27 and must have completed two years of college, or be in the process of finishing the second year at the time ap plication is made. Candidates for the "NavCad" program join the Naval, Reserve and agree to serve a total of four years on active duty. This includes 18 months of .flight rtaining at Pensacola, Fla., and the remainder of the time as a commissioned aviator with the operating forces of the navy. Aviation Cadets receive $105 monthly, lodging, board, and required uniforms. In addition, the premiums on $10,000 worth of life insurance will be paid by the Navy during the period of flight training. Pay received upon commissioning amounts to $35." without dependents, and $430.75 with dependents. The 18-month flight training at Pensacola includes pre-flight, basic flight, and advanced train ing with the latter phase in volving training in combat air craft, and when possible, the cadet will be given his choice of specializing in multi-engine bomber or patrol, or single en gine fighter types. Jet aircraft are reaching the Navy from manufacturers in in creasing numbers, and Cadets who finish training and are commissioned can expect addi tional training in Jets. Girls Receive Badges Willamina Girl Scout troop 2 held its regular meeting. Each fiirl rennivpri hpr trmin flower badge and several gave excellent reports on their pro ficiency badges. Refreshments were served by the January Plans Proceed For Carnival "Fairyland Follies" will be the theme for the traditional Civics club's carnival thi s year in the Salem high school audi torium, March 31, a 8 p.m. Tentative plans and arrange ments are now being worked on by Leslyn Burdette and Ber- nice Imlah, co-chairmen for the affair. A program committee of Joan Marie Miller, Don Bennett, Gor don Sloan and President Jim Rock are making plans for the hostesses, Janet Glass, Bonnie King and Lona Boyer. Miss Paper Cup Actress Pat Williams, dubbed "Miss Paper Cup of 1950" by the Pa per Cup institute of America, steps into a king-sized cup in Hollywood to prove she fills the bill or the cup. (Acme Telephoto) Sanliam Hunters Bag 3 Cougars Detroit. Ore., Jan 31 0J.B i Despite the snow and cold Walt and Carl Ball have taken to cougar hunting and within the past week have bagged three cats that will bring in both state and county bounties to the Ball brothers. On one of the mountains In this north Santiam area in the Cascades, the hunters and their dogs treed a female cougar near Idanha. Walt brought the coug ar down with his single-shot .22 "caliber rifle. Next day, although a heavy snow that covered tracks had fallen, the brothers went out with their dogs again. Within a short time the dogs had treed two cougars. Carl brought them both down with his .22. Because of recent deep snows, the big cats have been forced to come down into civilized areas for food. Chicken houses have been hard hit. . Grand Island Mrs. Clarence Hockhill has been a guest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wood and family in the Fairview district several days. Oregon Blue Grass Test May LickCrabgrass Problem New York, Jan. 31 W) Two new strains of grass have been developed which will lick the crabgrass problem in tne nortnern states, an official of the United States Golf association says. The antl-crabgrass strains have been developed at a Mary land turf experiment station, Dr. Fred V. Grau, director of the USGA's green section, declared- yesterday. Dr. Grau was here for the annual meeting of the associa tion. The association's green section operates the experimen tal grass farm, the plant indus try station at Beltsville, Md., in cooperation with the depart ment of agriculture. Dr. Grau said that between 600 and 700 acres were now being sown in Oregon with one of the grass strains, and that seed would be available to the public in two years. The new strain, called Merion Blue Grass it was first found in 1936 on a tee at the Merion Golf club in Philadelphia is far more disease resistant than common blue grass, Dr. Grau reported. The official said that while any blue grass normally will outgrow crabgrass, it is highly susceptible to disease and in a weakened condition permits the hardier crabgrass to outgrow it. The second strain, Dr. Grau said, will prove important to lawnkeepers in the northern states when seed becomes plen tiful enough to permit wide marketing. This is a Bermuda grass which he called U-3. Dr. Grau described this as the first Bermuda strain to prove sufficiently winter - hardy to grow in the north. He said the grass was fast growing, adding that, on a U-3 lawn, crabgrass "hasn't got a chance." Homeowners might not like it, though, it has a tendency to crowd into adjoining flower beds. carnival, which will feature skits and acts put on by the 15 school clubs. Princesses representing each club are soon to be announced. Various committee heads for the carnival are: Publicity, Da vid Blackmer; interludes, Cres cendo club; makeup, Sue Perry; princesses, Edna Hill and Janet Gaiser; judges, Earl Eshleman; food, Mary Feike; tickets and programs, Kent Myers. Faculty advisers working with the Civics club in presentation of the carnival are Mrs. Ger trude Smith and Mrs. Pauline Coheen, co-advisers. Mrs. Smith has been Civics club adviser since the club first started and has been the pro moter behind the production ev ery year. PAPRIKA Q that PLEASES m ir.ji . IS Ben-Hur odds tne hot Hungarian to tlit mild Spanish paprikas . . , brings you a superb blend. Pure, Imported Ben-Hur Paprika de lights the palate, brings color and taste to salads, eggs, goulash, dressings and cheese dishes, BEN-HUR flavors best , FAMOUS OCEAN SPRAY " BCranberry Jelly 115, iBI L00K AT ,S BUY 7001 I T Wxr"- -J?z 3n 4-LB. BAG & . 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