Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, July 21, 1950, Page 3, Image 3

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    I
Damf Sire Shield
Colt from Cougar
Albany A cougar, apparent
ly the loser in a fight with the
dam and sire of a palomino colt
in the Parrish Gap area of Mar
ion county, was hunted today.
Mrs. Dale Harnisch, owner of
the horses, said she found the
colt and Its mother badly slash
ed and bleeding profusely yes
terday when she went to inspect
a herd she pastures in the well-
populated area.
A stallion, sire of the colt,
was seriously scratched.
Harnisch and Dale Priest,
assistant Linn county agent,
tried to pick up the trail with
a hound, but were unsuccessful.
They said however, they found
evidence of a cougar, and
thought it still in the area.
There were indications it was
an old one or had been injured,
they said.
Cougars had been reported
aeen in the area previously. The
fact that they seldom leave
ithout killing a victim led to
the theory that the dam and
aire' had protected the colt.
The colt and mother were
treated by a veterinarian.
Baptist Youth
To Make Report
Sixteen young people of the
First Baptist church will share
in the Sunday evening service
which will be designated
"Camp Night" Misses Joyce
Spillman, Virginia Burris, Vir
ginia McCullen, Carol Kamptsra,
Jean Turnbull, Phyllis Johnston,
Beverly Salisbury, Arlene Dutoit,
Messrs. Kenneth Lottis, John
Jelden, John Penman, Ronald
Swanson, Dave Heinz, Bill Gwin
Larry Delk, and Alec Howard
will give brief reports on the
different phases of camp life.
The young neoDle have lust
returned from the Conservative
Baptist Youth Camp at Cannon
Beach, where 200 Baptist young
people from over the state of
Oregon gathered for their annual
retreat.
Pastor Lloyd T. Anderson will
bring the evening's message en
titled, "Is This the Prophetic
Hour of God?" Jim Vaus will be
the guest speaker at the regular
Wednesday night service at 7:30
July 26. Vaus is a former "wire
tapper" for a gangster mob and
was converted at the Billy Gra
ham meetings in Los Angeles.
Dr. Lloyd Anderson will leave
Sunday night for Seattle, Wash
ington and will spend the next
week at the Beulah Park Bible
Conference as the Camp speaker.
Year 'Round Plan
Garden Group Aim
Keizer Main business tran
sacted at the July meeting of
the Keizer Garden club held
this week in the fire hall was
a discussion of an organized
plan to be carried out through
the year.
Three new members were
added to the planning commit
tee to aid chairman John L.
Oudeans in preparing a large
scale program. The new com
mittee members are Virgil R.
Ballantyne, Mrs. David Friesen
and Mrs. Archie Claggett.
Donald Fleming was initiated
into the club.
A very attentive and interest
ed group listened to and watch
ed guest speaker D. Ray Brown
of the Salem Men's Garden club
as he demonstrated corsage
making. Afterward several
members tried their hand at the
tricky procedure under h 1 s
direction.
Refreshments were served
after the lecture by committee
women Mrs. A. W. Beardsley
and Mrs. J. M. Six.
$18-a-Week
Scrub Woman
Finds $40, 000
Syracuse, N. Y., July 21 (")
Mrs. Mary Sakowski, an $18-a-
week cleaning woman, called the
First Trust and Deposit Co. yes
terday and asked officers to
come get their $40,000.
Mrs. Sakowski explained that
she found the money on the bank
floor while sweeping Wednes
day night and took it home for
safe keeping.
New at the job, Mrs. Sakow
ski said she was scared and did
not know what to do with such
a sum of money when she found
it. "So when I finished work,
I simply put it in a paper bag
with my shoes and took it home
with me."
"I was sure glad to get rid of
the money," Mrs. Sakowski said
when a bank officer came to her
Second Cover Spray
For Apples, Pears
Apple and pear growers in
the Willamette valley are being
advised by Entomologist B. G.
Thompson of Oregon State col
lege to apply their second cover
spray for codling moth control
by July 25.
Three pounds lead arsenate
in 100 gallons of water is the
recommended spray for the av
erage orchard. In orchards
where codling moth is not a
serious problem, two pounds
lead arsenate to 100 gallons of
water may be used.
Three pounds calcium arsen
ate in 100 gallons of water is
only slightly less effective than
the lead arsenate spray.
For growers following a DDT
spray program, Thompson sug
gests the second application be
made by July 25. The spray
should contain two pounds of
50 per cent wettable DDT to 100
gallons of water.
home to get it. "I couldn't sleep
all night."
The money was in four bun
dles of $10 and $20 bills.
A bank spokesman said Mrs.
Sakowski would get a reward,
but that the amount had not
been determined.
Mrs. Lawrence Frey, Mrs. Earl
E. Petersen, Mrs. E. P. Copple,
Mrs. Harry H. George, Mrs. Wil
liam Kletzer and . Dean An
derson, all of Portland; Mrs. Paul
Patterson, Hillsboro, and R. E
Lieuallen, Oregon College of
Education, Monmouth.
Representing the Oregon Edu-
cation association are: Dr.
George Ebey, , Portland: Frank
Bennett, Salem; James King,
Lebanon; Wendell Van Loan,
Corvallis; Marion Winslow
Grants Pass; Loy Marshall, For
est Grove; Luther King, Oregon
City; Frank Doerfler, Woodburn;
Ralph Jones, Hood River; Mrs.
Lucille Klinge, Eugene; Dale
Ickes, Milwaukie; and Fred Pat-
ton, LaGrande, all school super
intendents.
Public School Study Group
Conference at Monmouth
Oregon College of Education, Monmouth More than forty
leaders in Oregon education and school administration circles
will serve as discussion leaders at the Oregon College Conference
on Community and School Relations to meet here Wednesday,
July 26th.
Questions which are really hot
issues in various Oregon com
munities will be under intensive
study. Emphasis on the "three
R's," classroom discipline, use of
out-of-school time, ability group
ing of students, the school lunch
program, how citizens can best
participate in planning work of
the school, and evaluation of
teaching and teachers all will be
assigned to groups of educators,
administrators and educators,
administrators and parents for
consideration of the factors in
volved and report to the confer
ence later in the day.
Dr. Louis I. Kaplan, head of
the department of education at
OCE, will be the main speaker
in the opening session of the
conference at - 9 a.m. Mrs. Je-
nelle Moorhead, president of the
Oregon Congress of Parents and
Teachers, will preside.
Dr. Roben Maaske, president
of OCE, will welcome the dele
gates and guests.
After an orientation session,
the conference will divide into
question groups for exploratory
study of the problem assigned
each group. Following lunch
eon at noon, the question groups
will become discussion groups to
consider the interplay of the fac
tors involved on each question,
and to formulate a group report
for inclusion in the conference
report.
Dr. Wendell Van Doan, super-
intendent of the Corvallis
schools, will be the summary
speaker at the closing general
session. Dr. Van Doan will re
port on the work of the confer
ence and its implications for
Oregon schools and communities.
A printed report on the work of
the question and discussion
groups and on the conference
as a whole will be made avail
able to interested persons.
Among those who will serve
as group leaders for the con
ference are: From the P-TA:
Mrs. Helmer Lindstrom, Astoria;
Mrs. C. A, Fratzke, Independ
ence; Mrs. H. H. Hargreaves,
Mrs. Wilbur J. Falloon, Mrs. Ar
thur N. Green, Mrs. Raymond
F. Graap, Mrs. C. D. Cummins,
C0TT0NW00DS
LARRY AND HIS
CASCADE RANGE
RIDERS
Every Sat. Nire
Ladies Free 'Till 9:30
Dancing Till 1 A. M.
' Four Corners Residents
Buy Benz Electrical Firm
Four Corners Mr. and Mrs. Val Nelson, residing at 1690
Claxter road, Salem, have purchased the Benz Electric Co. busi
ness located at 3885 Mahrt ave. The new owner will continue
to operate the business in the Benz building under the name of
the Nelson Electric Co.
The Nelsons came to Oregon
about a year ago from Taft, Calif.
He has been in the electric busi
ness 20 years. They have four
children, Tom, Dennis, Muriel
and Carol.
The Benz family has lived at
8875 Mahrt avenue for fifteen
years and he has operated the
Benz Electric business since
1945. They plan to move to Sa
lem in the near future.
Visitors in the E. R. Corning
home are their daughter and
children, Mrs. Waldo Kleen and
David. Michael and Stephen,
who have been living at Gresh
am, where Kleen owned and
operated a variety store. He
has sold that business and ac
cepted the position as manager
! of the Redmond shoe store. The
Kleens have purchased a newly
completed residence in Redmond
and will move soon.
The Four Corners Baptist Mis
sionary society held its monthly
meeting on Wednesday in the
' home of Mrs. Oliver Rickman
This was an all-day meeting
with a sack lunch at noon.
Working on the quilt and roll
ina bandages were Mrs. Donald
Jacobe, Mrs. Preston Butler, Mrs
W. H. McClain, Mrs. M. M. Sut
ter, Mn. Roy Thayer, Mrs. Eldon
France, Mrs. 5. C. Cable, Mrs
W. R. Gould, Mrs. Victor Loucks
Mrs. E. S. Hausfeld, Mrs. S. D
Hovey, Mrs. Roland Carnine,
Mrs. Harry Hammond, Mrs. El
mer Baker, Mrs. Herman Valen-court,
Hazel Ruhle of Chicago Is
spending a month with her
mother, Mrs. Anna Ruhle.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lawson.
JoLea and Roy, Jr., of Vista,
Calif., were week-end guests of
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Wilson.
Mrs. Lawson is a niece of Mr.
Simon. It had been 15 years
since they had met.
A nursery with a competent
person in charge will be avail
able to the parents of small-children
who wish to attend church
services at the Four Corners
Baptist church.
American Legion
Dance
EVERY SATURDAY
1 0 p. m. to 1 a. m.
Music by
BLUES BUSTERS
SALEM
Club Members and Guests
Admission 75
LEGION BUILDING
Woodburn
FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP
AUTO TRUCK FIRE
You Will Never Know
Unless you investigate See us Check
our rates, service and policy. You will
be surprised how much you can save.
BILL OSKO
466 Court St.
Phone 3-S661
BILL OSKO
Dist Mgr.
rnpital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Friday, July 21, 1950 3
We give and redeem S&H cjreea siamps
Open Friday Nights Till 9
1 Down Will
Hold Your
Cashmere in
Layaway
177 north liberty
Shop in
Air-Conditioned
Comfort
M v T
jSt'"S . LU ' f Canary
T M WJl Leaf Green
jffjpr y$W.J pink
Wmmf Blue
' PV iftlp - -Natural
Sizes 36 to 40
Nationally Famous Premier Cashmeres
Pure imported Chinese Cashmeres soft and sweet, the
way you want them! Beautifully detailed with their
hand fashioned sleeves rolled neckline stitched
with invisible elastic thread to keep them shapely and
trim through nil your wear. Colors are new ... fit ie
perfoct . . . and we offer them on an easy payment plan
too. Pick your style, pick your color $1 down will
hold your selection in layaway while you pay for it
easily and painlessly the rest of the summer. Make
your selection now while all colors are in stock.
Sportswear, main floor
SHORT SLEEVE SLIPON $12.95
LONG SLEEVE PULLOVER $14.95
LONG SLEEVE CARDIGAN $16.95
NYLON HOSIERY
Special purchase of 45 gauge, 30 denier
nylons slightly irregular. Cellophane XQ
packaged. 3 colors.
RAYON HALF SLIPS
Beautiful rayon knit half slips with $ A A
lace trim, white only. Sizes 24 to 30. ' V V
LADIES' SUMMER SUITS
Final clearance values to $25.00.
checks, solids. Sizes 10 to 20.
Beautifully styled. One day onlyl
LADIES' HATS
An appealing assortment of summer hats. Nov
elties, straws. One group $1 QQ
of 50 at Just iWW
LADIES' DRESSES
Bneclal eurchase cotton dresses nationally ad-
sanionzea; nuge assort- e qu
Values from $8.95 to '
Shantungs,
$10.00
vertised.
ment of styles,
$10.85. 2 'or $11
DENIM "ELFIE" SHOES
Clearance of Elfie sport shoes gold $ AQ
and blue. Reg. $2.99. Just 50 pairs at
80 SQUARE PRINT FABRIC
A wonderful selection of rugged 80-square prints
in wanted summer patterns and colors. 10
Florals, solids and stripes YD. "
LADIES' STRAW HATS
Largo brim garden straws of imported Milan
straw. Multicolor combinations. 10
One day only
Men's Cotton Mesh
Sports Shirts
(Reg.n.95) $H
You'll beat the heat when you wear one of theso light-as-a-breeze
combed cotton shirts. Comfortablt short
sleeves; slotted spread collar for wear with or without
a tie Sanforized for easy tubbing. WhiU, Blue,
S, M, L sizes.
Men't, main floor.
Sale! Plastic
Drapes . that
Look Like Fabric
S
n
pr.
You'll have to look mighty close to
make sure these smartly tailored
draperies are actually plastic. Meas
use 27x90", with hemmed bottoms;
seamed tops, all ready for you to
hang. There's an attractive group of
floral designs to choose from. Somt
with slight imperfections.
Draperies, downstair