Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, March 11, 1950, Page 11, Image 11

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    Cardinal Farm System
Put on Spot by Manager
By LEO H. PETERSON
(United Press Sports Editor)
St. Petersburg, Fla., March 11
(U.R) Eddie Dyer put the far
flung Cardinal farm system on
the spot today.
"It Is going to have to produce
some young baii players ior us
soon," the manager of the St.
Louis Cardinals declared, "or
the other national league clubs
are going to out-distance us."
Not that he dosen't think the
Cards won't be right up in there
this season, but he was looking
to the years ahead when he is
going to have to replace such
veterans as Marty Marion, Enos
Slaughter, Harry Brecheen. Max
Lanier and othtrs.
"I guess I've become known
as a stand-pat manager be
cause I haven't been making
many player changes," he
said. "Well the fact of the mat
ter is I haven't changed be
cause our farm system hasn't
come up with good young ball
players to take over."
This spring Dyer is concen
trating on developing an under
study for Marion "because we
still are worried about his back"
and a power-hitting right hand
ed batter to bat between Stan
Musial and Slaughter.
He hopes Ed Nietopski, a
youngster up from Omaha, will
be able to relieve Marion and
that another rookie, Bib Stev
Bilko, who hit .310, will give
him that righthanded hitting
strength
However, Nietopski may be a
year away, he fears, so he may
have to understudy Marion with
Red Schoendienst and let Solly
GORGEOUS GUSSIE AGAIN
Black Panties Bring
Editorial Spankings
Cairo, March 11 (IP) Ger
trude "Gorgeous Gussie"
Moran, who got an editorial
spanking for wearing black
panties in an international
. tennis tournament here yes
terday, won the championship
today wearing traditional
white ones.
She whipped Mrs. Heraldo
Weiss of Argentina, 6-2, 6-3,
to run her string of singles
championship victories on her
world tour to four.
Gussie wore black shorts
not regulation white when
she and Mrs. Pat Todd won
ladies doubles in the Egyptian
international tennis tourna
ment yesterday.
The audience Included
Egypt's beautiful Princess
Faiza, who presented the cup
to the winners.
The Egyptian newspaper Le
Progres called the black shorts
"shocking" and said: "Miss
Moran has proved to have
very doubtful taste. . . . We
shall leave this young player
to the final judgment of pos
terity." The British-owned Egyptian
Gazette used typical restraint
In declaring that the Califor
nia tennis star "caused a mild
sensation." The Gazette said
the rules "emphatically state
that white should be worn."
The Journal De Egypte,
cocking an editorial eyebrow,
merely said: "Georgeous Gus
sie won the crowd's attention
with her good game and her
black shorts."
Gussie, who crashed front
SCORES in
(Cemplele
University Alleys
850 CLASSIC LEAGUE
Stralton Plumblnr (4) Stratton 534. Ol
ney, Jr. 572, Pearl 520, Hautien 559. White
SS4 2739. Nobles Tavern (0) Nailer 475,
Whittmore 602, Holmes 470, Smith 450,
McMuUcn 4612348,
I Mayflower Milk (2) Meyers 507, Bob
Straw 411, Bolser 48B. Bud Straw 477, Mac
abee 5082451. Hint-land's Pet Shop 3l
Braden 512. Busch 500, Peas 403, Clark
520. Farmer 156. Sub. 2972468.
Good Housekeeping (1) Simons 544,
Jones 523, Cady 464, Irons 533, Olney Sr.
4303494. Trallways Cafe 3 Eratfaard
530. Curtis 498. Cross 499, McNall Ml.
Relnhard 5422580.
HUhland Market (0 Owens 530, Mab
ry 543. Causey 485, Johnson 558, Lond
say 4612587. Universal Pomp (4) Stea
ler 542. Gardner 519. Owen 479. W, Val
dez 538, B. Valdez 5952673.
Salem Llithtlni 6 Appliance (01 Doer
fler 515, Bolton 455, DeBow 5591918.
Salem flardware f 4 1 Garrison 455, Lemon
549, West 579, Page 4021985,
Lutx Florist (3) Kitzmlller 539, Ops
ton 523. Lutz 476, Comstock 460, Powell
4582456. Thrift way Cleaners (D Creasy
S97. Farley 518. Schultze 528, Hart 441, De
liney 4622346.
High Individual game: DeBow, 219. High
Individual series: Ben Vaidez, 595. High
team game and series: Stratton Plumb
ing. 936 and 2739.
Capitol Alleys
CAPITOL SCRATCH
Woo dry Furniture (0) flquee Kitchen
503, Doc Ollnzer 538, Dean Arehart 513,
Rex Adolph 500. Buskk's Market (31
Jim Ross 527, Vern Hickman 659, Stan
Braden 548, Dick Phlppi 566.
Capital Bedding 12) Hugh Wllkerson
654, Bob Davts 567. Jack Cherrlngton 429,
Don Poulln 517. Slewert Const. (11
Vaughn Gardner 587. Al Slewert 446, ffv
Clark 601, Chet Boyce 539.
VyitkooP Blair (01 Milt Hartwell 478,
Millard Pekar 453. John Raybuxn 445,
Tonv Blzler 524. Frlesen Fn ml tare (3i
Geo. Mlrtch 582, John Frlesen 543, Mlkt
Stlenbock 543. E. T. Hartwell 577.
High team game and series: Buslck's
Market, 764 and 2300. High Individual aer
ies: Vern Hickman. 659. High Individual
came: Hugh Wllkerson, 257.
MERCANTILE LEAGUE
Oresonian 10) Flnden 471. DavU 433,
Buekholt 339. Boyd 438, Baldwin 443.
Salem Iron Works (31 Lohrman 501, Cor
dler 459, Hartman 477, Kolsk? 361, Orecn
DEADLINE MARCH 15th!
TAX RETURNS PREPARED
In your home
Phone 4-2033
For an Appointment
REASONABLE RATES
Hemus, who looked so good in a
brief trial late last fall, take
over at second for Schoendienst.
Bilko hit 35 home runs and
batted in 125 huns with Roches
ter last year "and looks like the
answer to our right handed hit
ting needs" if he can master the
art of playing first base, accord
ing to Dyer.
Dyer isn't putting all his eggs
in Bilko's basket, however. He
pointed out that Nippy Jones
took up the slack until he was
hurt and that he might come
back as good as ever.
"I doubt whether he will be
able to start the season, but I
am hoping he will come a
round shortly thereafter," Dy
er said. "We'll need him bad
ly if Bilko doesn't come
through."
As for Jiis pitching. Dyer be
lieves it "will be better than
last year when I had the best
staff in the league."
Once more he feels that the
Dodgers are the club to beat.
"They will be the toughest,"
he said. "Then I fear Boston
more than Philadelphia. That
deal with the Giants enabled
Boston to come up with the
most power hitting in the lea
gue. "The Giants are uncertain
They will need real good pitch
ing to beat the other clubs be
cause they sacrificed so much
power.
"And we found out late in
September how tough the Pir
ates and Cubs can be for they
are the clubs which beat our
brains out and cost us the pen
nant."
pages last summer when she
sported lace panties before a'
staid Wimbledon crowd, was
a little bewildered by it all.
"I'm just a nice girl who
plays tennis," she said a little
plaintively. "Everything I do
seems to get into the papers."
King Kong Shows Signs
Of Comeback in Training
By OSCAR FRALEY
(United Press sports Editor!
New York, March 11 (U.R It
was only a line in the notes
which come out of the base
ball spring training camps but
they were 12 words which
may prophesy a pennant for
the surging Detroit Tigers.
They said.
"Charley Keller hit a triple,
double and single in a intra
squad game."
There was hope, in that
brief sentence, that the burly
king kong of New York fame
may have shaken the three
year jinx which has plagued
him and caused his mid-winter
release from the team for
which he helped win six pen
nants. The Yankees thought that
Keller, at 33, was through.
From all i n d 1 c a 1 1 o n s, the
broad-backed Maryland slug
ger had been coming apart
at the seams for three years.
They remembered 1947
the ALLEYS
Beialta)
414.
Capitol No. t f0) Cherrlngton 360. Mc-
Calllster 392, Brennan 491, Wacken 470,
Overholts 474. Hogg Bros. No. 1 (3) Car
ter 540. surgeon 3BB. Luke 484. Jacobson
386. Nuss 510.
Railway Express (3) Ettner 503, Gray
ae, Aianess 384. LaKe 480. Larscn 558.
nogr; Br oi. No. 2 0) Clans 357, Backle
391, Hanson 315, Royse 346, Westphal 468.
Chappeles 12) Wlckizer 455, Hoyt 364,
Morris 428. Chappele 494. Jory 432. Pink
Flepbant (DHurd 479. Smith 433, Knight
49t, rruaeue vis, ueianey Ait.
High team series: Salem Iron Works,
2593. High tfam game: Hogg Bros. No. 1.
High individual game and series: Ben
Lara en, ZIB and 3SB.
Duck Pin
COMMERCIAL LEAGUE NO.
Dr. Pepper Marvin Harksen
Bob Lorenz 571, Don Schur 41S, Joe Por
mlck 286. Bill Barrows 345. Ore. Telephone
Union (01 Thomas Batchelder 370. Bud
Trlbble 299. Howard Dove 308, Don RlUof-
son 4io. buz sawyer 400.
State Tire Service 10 Rodney Petty
311, m. jarvis sti, uanion Jensra 471,
D. More? 323. Andrew Click 403, Dyer In.
snrance (4) Leonard Hlclcs 463, p. Hick
453. Claybourn Dyer 413, BIU Dyer 424.
W. Phillips 340.
Unlove Cleaner, (4) J. R. Broolca SS9,
Howard Brnach 474, George Shelly 362,
Harvey Alexander 433, R. Dodd 390, Blue
Lake Producers (0) Ru&sell Zlnk 341, Jim
Werner 400. Clyde Schell 312, M. Malbert
431. Bye 336.
Bonesteele's (3) cletus Boedlchelmer
364, Ralph Dunser 411, Harold Biles 308,
Oene Myers 328, Vern McKee 421. Ram
aces II) Bob Ramage 320, Chuck Col
lin 407, Curly Monner 376, Wayne Fields
379, Harold BauEhn 96, Carroll Harlew
337.
Hlch team series and came: Unique
Cleaners, 2268 and 856. Hlch Individual
series: Bob Lorenz (Dr. Pepper! 571. Hlch
Individual came: J. R. Brook (Unique)
215.
Everyone Knows Only
Coterized Oil Leaves
MA CARB0N!
IIU SOOT!
35622 or 35606
iilta's Eielitlva Cftteriitd Oil Dtaltr
Howard J. Smalley
Oil Co. 1405 Broadway
Nugget Walker Korndyke, Holstein cow, being milked by
owner, C. J. Berning of Mount Angel.
Students Will
Appear Sunday
Pupils of Jean Hobson Rich
are to appear in an ensemDie
program at Stone Piano com
pany, Sunday, at 4 p.m.
The public is invited.
The program includes the fol
lowing:
Sonatina: No. 6 in D dementi
Eddie Syring, Jr. - Jean i. Rich
Chorale Prelude (O God. Thou
Holv God) Branms
Lou Ellen Moore - Jean H. Rich
Hungarian Rondo Haydn
vicki ward - urn Ann won
Prelude. " Introduction. Fuitue
C. Franck
Susan Perrv - Jean H. Rich
Trepak Tschalkowsky
Patricia Megquier - Liou Ann won
Londonderry Air arr. E. Gest
Theme Russe Rachmaninoff
Mary Campbell - Susan steed
Pavanne Gould
Janice Roberts - Jean H. Rich
Concerto in C Major J. Williams
Karlene Qulstad - Judy Klempel
Guard Sentence
Upheld by Court
Long Beach, Calif., March 11
(P) Superior court has upheld a
nine-day court martial sentence
imposed by the national guard
on a member for missing drills.
Pvt. Glenn Roberts, 19, was
ordered yesterday to serve nine
days for failing to appear at
scheduled drills. Judge Fred
when Keller played in only
15 games before he was strick
en with a spinal ailment and
underwent a sacroliac opera
tion. There was doubt then
that he would ever play again.
And it wasn't the old Keller
of the murderous swing who
fought his way back into the
lineup in 1948. Some of his
speed was gone and he lacked
that old power which so often
sent the ball rocketing out of
the park. Still he made the
grade until he fractured his
hand fielding a sinking line
drive. Last year is was more
trouble, pulling a side muscle
and being shipped back to
Newark so that the Yankees
could bring up and active
player.
Once again the indomin
table man with the level
brown eyes fought his way
back to the big leagues. Yet
for the season he appeared in
only 60 games and missed com
peting in the series.
So the Yankees let him go
and it looked as if King Kong
was out for good.
But one man had faith that
there still was some winning
major league baseball in that
sturdy Keller frame and that
agressive Roller heart. That
man was Red Rolfe, once his
teamate on the Yankees back
in the days when Charley was
breaking in and forging a rep
utation as a fearsome home
run hitter.
Rolfe has a good, young out
field in Johnny Groth, 23,
Vic Wertz, 25, and 29-year-old
Hoot Evers. He also has a
capable replacement in Pat
Mullin. But he signed Keller
with the observation that:
"He'll add class to the club
and help our youngsters to
I'LL TAKE IT!
If your attorney suggested you pay him $10.00
and he would guarantee that you would not be
called upon to pay a personal liability judgment
during the course of the next year, would you
accept? We think you would. A $10.00 bill wisely
invested in a COMPREHENSIVE PERSONAL LIA
BILITY POLICY with your GENERAL OF AMERI
CA AGENCY will make' thot guarantee up to
$10,000.
:huck if . CHBT
INSURANCE
373 N. Church
Miller ruled: "The national
guard has the authority to disci
pline its members who fail to
abide by its orders."
The youth's attorney said he
will appeal to Gov. Earl Warren
the guard's commander In
chief, to lessen the punishment.
48 Legislators
In Race Again
A big percentage of members
of the state legislature are mak
ing bids for re-election, which
is a surprise. At the end of last
year's record 97-day session
many of them said they were
through.
Of the 15 senators whose
terms expire, 10 are running for
re-election and one is running
for governor. One is running for
the supreme court, and only
three are quitting politics.
Of the 60 house members, 38
filed for re-election, and six are
after senate seats, making a to
tal of 44 who want more legis
lative service. One filed for con
gress, one for labor commission
er, one died, and only 13 art
uittin DOlitics.
The senators who are quitting
the senate are Austin Flegel
Portland, democratic candidate
for governor; Allan G. Carson
Salem- Orval N. Thompson, ti
hanv William M. McAllister,
Merifnrd: and Austin Dunn, Ba
Iter, who is running for the su
nrpmp court.
Amone the house members
who won't be back are Speaker
Frank J. Van Dyke, Mediora
Max Landon, Sweet nome,
chairman of the highway com
mittee: Lyle D. Thomas, uanas
chairman of the education com
mittee: and Alex G. Barry, fort-
land, chairman of the judicjary
committee.
Final Tribute Paid
Edgar Lee Masters
Petersburg, 111., March HOT
This small south-central Illi
nois community yesterday paid
final tribute to poet Edgar Lee
Masters at simple funeral ser
vices for the author of "Spoon
River Anthology."
Stores closed and more than
200 hieh school students at
tended burial services in a fu
neral home. G. William Horsley,
SDrinafield attorney who por
trays Abraham Lincoln at the
New Salem festival, read Mas
ter's poem "Silence."
Masters, who died Monday at
Melrose Park, Pa., at the age of
81 after years of ill health, was
buried in tho cemetery where
lie many of his c h i 1 d h o o
friends. Masters, born in uar
net, Kans., grew up in Peters
burg and Lewiston, 111.
Turner PTA Meets
Turner The PTA will meet
at the school house Monday
night. A program will follow
the business meeting. Mrs. Rob
ert Mitchell is president; Mr.
Beckenridge vice president; Nel
lie Thomas, secretary and Max
ine Chapman, treasurer.
keep their feet on the ground."
The Yankees, who thought
that Keller was through, will
be one of the favorites as they
go out to defend the world
championship. The Tjgers will
be one of their chief threats.
It would be poetic justice if
the man they tossed away
should be the one the beat
them.
AGENCY
Phone 3-91 19
Mount Angel Cow Within
Reach of Championship
Nugget Walker Korndyke, six-year-old registered Holstein
cow owned by C. J. Berning of Mt. Angel, is today within easy
reach of a national Holstein 365-day buttcrfat record, two times
per day milking. With 16 days to go before the test ends she has
produced 1130.1 pounds of butterfat, with 1.9 pounds of the
national record which is 1132
pounds, and is manufacturing
butterfat at the rate of 2.9
pounds per day. To date her to
tal milk production is 26,557
pounds.
Already broken is the Oregon
record set in 1923 by another
Berning cow who produced 1026
pounds of butterfat to become
the first Holstein ever to yield
more than 1000 pounds of but
terfat in a year.
It took 27 years to develop a
cow capable of breaking the old
Oregon record but Berning, who
has hand milked Nugget during
the test, says he is amazed at the
ease with which she consistently
pours out huge quantities of
milk month after month. Fellow
dairymen wonder at her effici
ency in doing the job on a nomi
nal grain ration. Not a large ani-
m a 1 by Holstein standards,
weight 1400 pounds, she con
sumes little more than half the
amount of grain and silage that
was fed to Model Segis Prilly
Gelsche in making the 1923 rec
ord. For the past two years Nug
get has been highest producer
among the nearly 20,000 cows
in the Marion county Dairy Herd
Improvement association. As a
two year old she started off with
41 pounds of milk per day and
after 372 days was still pailing
45 pounds. A year later she in
creased daily milk flow during
a 311 day lactation from an ini
tial 60 pounds daily to 63 pounds
at the finish. Her record as a
four year old was 23,522 pounds
of mlik and 1001.7 of butterfat.
From April to November this
past year she grazed on irrigat
ed ladino and subterranean pas
ture along with 21 other cows in
the Berning herd. All were fed
hay and grain in addition to the
green feed. Her present winter
barn daily ration is 15 pounds
grain, 20 pounds corn silage and
40 to 60 pounds first cutting al
falfa hay. Hay is fed seven times
daily between 5 a.m. and 8 p.m.
The grain ration is made up of
48 parts rolled oats. 30 Darts
ground barley, 30 parts millrun.
20 parts linseed oil meal. 10
parts beet pulp, nine parts mo
lasses, one part salt and one part
Done meal.
By comparison, the 1923 rec
ord cow was kept in the barn
and dry fed throughout her year
test period. She consumed 25
pounds of grain, 30 to 40 pounds
of silage and 30 pounds of hay
uauy.
Oats and barley fed to the
dairy herd is produced on the
70 acre Berning farm. Pasture is
rotated between 12 acres of sub
terranean clover divided into
two paddocks and 12 acres of
ladino clover fenced for 10 pad-
aocks. The land is treated with
barnyard manure and super
phosphate and recently has been
limed. A sprinkler irrigation
system was installed three years
ago.
Segis De Kol Model, bred by
Ernest Werner of Howell Prairie
and scld to Berning in 1916 is
tne foundation animal to which
the entire herd traces. Model
Segis Prilly, holder of the past
state record, was her daughter.
Model was grand champion fe
male at the 1926 World's fair in
Philadelphia and Ail-American
Holstein association cow the
same year.
Nugget Walker Korndyke was
born Jan. 28, 1944, sired by
Mount Angel College Segis
Korndyke and out of the cow
Nugget Burke Walker. She is
now in calf to Hallrose Dandy
Boy, the Berning herd sire. Bo
fore starting the present test she
was dry 50 days.
Berning records have been on
365 days two times per day milk
ing throughout the test. Many
tests are run with three times
milking the first 40 days of the
period and to encourage maxi-i
Clough-Barrick Co.
CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO HEAR
"HYMNS OF THE WORLD"
FEATURING
The Kings Men
Monday thru Friday, 9:45 A.M.
KOCO 1490 K.G
It is our sincere hope that these
beloved songs will be a daily inspir
ation and comfort to you!
Clough-Barrick Co.
FUNERAL SERVICE
ESTABLISHED 1878
Church at Ferry Sti.
mum production cows are often
milked up to four times per day
for the full year. In such cases
records run considerably higher.
A Holstein owned by Carnation
Farms, Seattle, has produced
41.943 pounds of milk and 1,-
392.4 pounds of butterfat in 365
days, being milked four times
per day. Back in 1919 a four
year old Jersey, the immortal
Vive La France owned by Pick
ard Brothers of Marion, yielded
1,031.64 pounds of butterfat in
a year at four times milking,
which still is a Jersey record.
Due to the lack of uniformity
in testing regulations and . rules
in various countries the Holstein
Friesian association does not
recognize nor claim world re
cords for U. S. animals. This
policy is not meant to discredit
records made in other lands but
indicates that testing programs
are so varied that no true com
parison can safely be made.
In 1948 a happy Holstein in
England had her ration fortified
by the daily addition of eight
pints of beer and 10 aspirin
tablets. At the end of the year,
bleary-eyed and a bit wobbly on
her pins she had produced 45,081
pounds of milk, a disputed
world's record. In this country
stimulants such as beer, hor
mones and even unusually high
protein substances are taboo with
all breed record checkers.
Oregon State college is co
operating with the Holstein
Fricsian association of America
in conducting Berning testing.
Both dairy herd improvement
and Holstein Herd Improvement
Registry are used. Since the pre
sent test started, 19 surprise
tests and 16 check tests have
been made.
Record making animals are
nice assets for any dairyman.
Berning refused $1,000 for his
foundation cow in 1920. About
the same time Pickard Brothers
turned back an offer of $60,000
for Vive La France, Lady Silken
Glow and Darlings Jolly Lassie,
three of their record producers.
A half-sister to Nugget is en
tered in the State Holstein sale
to be held in April.
Real Estate Exchange
New Business Here
Bill Osko and Mrs. Alta L
Wells have opened the Salem
Real Estate Exchange at 466
Court street.
The new business is a recogni
tion of the increasing trend to
wards property exchanges, and
is Salem's first business to spe
cialize in trades and exchanges.
It is to be maintained as a
separate unit from the Farm
ers' Insuurance Group where
Osko will continue as district
manager.
King Honor Guest
Independence A dinner was
held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. R. E. King by a group of
friends, the occasion being a sur
prise for King on his birthday.
Those present were Mr. and Mrs.
James Robbie, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Hunnicutt, Frank Mc
Kinncy, Mrs. Henry Banks and
Clora Sowards.
ATTENTION
LOGGERS!
Top Prices Paid for
Your Logs at
Burkland Lumber
Co.
Turner, Ore.
Ph. 1125
oma5
AND
Phone 3-9139
Capital Journal, Salem, Ore.,
v.'r 1 . : :'. m ...i,. t " i I E
Lebanon Fifty years of wedded life came to a climax last
Sunday, March 5, for Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Gould at a home
reception attended by approximately 100 relatives and friends.
They have made their home in Lebanon for 20 years. Their
marriage took place in Baker, Ore., March 7, 1900. Mr. Gould
is a retired farmer and railroad man.
Student Body
Next Sponsor
Sponsor for the monthly visit
of the bloodmobilc to Salem next
Tuesday is the Willamette uni
versity student body. The unit
will be in operation at the First
Methodist church between 1 and
5 p.m.
Dr. G. Herbert Smith, Willam
ette president, says of this proj
ect of the students: "The blood
program of the American Red
Cross is in my estimation one
of the greatest humanitarian
programs of our country. This
is in truth a way in which we
give a little to save a life.' It
is gratifying to have Willamette
university participate in such
program."
The donors are not limited to
students, however, and others
of the interested public wishing
to donate blood at this time may
drop in during the hours of the
visitation or register in advance
at the Red Cross office.
George Adams is chairman of
the student committee arrang
ing for the mobile unit visit. He
stales 100 students have signed
to donate.
Olds Gets Post in
Silverfon Schools
Jefferson, Mar. 11 Douglas
V. Olds, who is completing a
FILMS
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Extra prints and reprints 4o ea.
Free IVIlllnir Hags on Request
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New WfRACLE to help
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JAMES
AND
228 Oregon Building
Saturday, March 11, 1950 11
J
course at Willamette university.
was named superintendent o i
schools at a meeting of the
school board Friday. He suc
ceeds Pat Beal, who becomes
principal of the new North Mar
ion high school at Hubbard when
classwork resumes in the fall.
Olds formerly taught in Sa
lem, Chemawa and Portland,
and also had lived at St. Helens,
He is a veteran of the last World
War, is married and has a young
daughter.
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Shows in Earl
Think i to the new Beltane
Phiotomold io uiterlr
irtnspareDt, almost lnl.tible
dericc do bunoonced loow
in rour earl
IIFWl Hiflh ,n fld'"' Clear Ton
RETT I xnJt wtU be i reTeUdoo to rod
wheo rou Jtr new 1950 Beitooe. New
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ifaanki to new elrctrcetc refinenecu.
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Salem, Oregon