II Thursday, March 19, 1953 RED GERMAN ILL "SHOOT BACK" ORDER ' 1 ' t , ,. , irfwi i i Newly arrived V. 8. F-80 Sobrejeti, one of tht few -planes conldnred match for Russia's MIG-15, appear ; on the flight line at Tuentenfeldruck Air Base near Munich, Germany. The planes, piloted by American vet erans of the Korean war, made their first patrol of Ger ! snany's Iron Curtain border under orders to ahoot back if attacked. (OP Telephoto) Ml. Angel Real Estate Moves Mt. Angel A number of real estate deal have been mad in residence properties here, including the Walter Zbner residence at the corner of Marquam and Pershing treeta purchased by Phillip Gooding, who la employed by the Farmers Union Oil com pany. Cm K. Wymore of Silver ton purchased the John Zoll aer residence property on Pershing street. George Jaeschke of Silver ton, purchased the Emma Gaul residence near the White Cor ner Grocery. . Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Ebner purchased the Joseph Rosno residence on Taylor street. , Several farm deals have also been completed for later occupancy,- both being under lease and allowing purchasers privilege of making improve ments and' alterations on buildings, etc. These being the 80-acre farm of John N. Gaffke, which was purchased by Wither P. Gruber of Vlsalia, Calif., and the Joseph sprauer 82-acre farm purchased by Leon Berning. Russians Flying Over West Europe Nightly By ran, NEWSOM COnUtd Priu Vortli a Antlnt) The Russians are making re gular photographic reconnais sance flights over strategic areas of Western Europe. American Air Force sources at Wiesbaden, . Germany, say their radar screens have picked up more than 100 strange air craft. Some were Allied craft and others were commercial airplanes which had strayed off the beam. But others were Russian. Air Force sources say these flights come almost any night when the weather Is bad. ' Then the Russians come over flying very high to photograph Allied installations by infra red film. The weather makes interception impossible. East Salem East Salem Two meetings are scheduled for East Salem this week. Garden Road Neigh- oornooa ciud members are Being entertained with a one o'clock luncheon at the home of Mrs. Earl Wood, 1S7S N 18th St., Friday, March SO. . Zdina Lane home extension members met at one o'clock) Thursday, March 19 in the home of Mrs. Vernon Gllmore, J030 Park Ave. The project discussed by Pauline Schaploe sky, county extension agent, was "Becoming a Good Buyer." Hoover Cub Pack meeting was postponed from this week to Friday, March 17 at 7:80 p.m. A 4-H meeting held Tuesday night was that of the Pee Wee Thlmblo club at the home of Janice Pahl on Livingston Ave. The girls discussed a radio play they will give. Four members, Marilyn Page, Darlene Clark, Janice Pahl and Jackie Smalley with guests Judy and Cherry Pahl present. For sewing the girls judged the garment protectors they had exhibited last week. : Darlene Clark will discuss care of the hair at the next meeting. Guests the past week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beckler on Sunnyview Ave., were their daughter, Mrs. Ed die Cater, and two sons of Coot Bay. Lillian Bilyeu Resigns Post ' Dallas Prospective drastic salary and budget cuts by the Polk County Red Cross Chap ter has resulted In resignation of Mrs. Lillian Bilyeu, execu tive secretary of the chapter. The resignation was handed to Woodrow Jones, president of the chapter, Monday. Jones stated that unless collections in the Red Cross drive' In Folk county Improve, the chapter may be closed. In her letter of resignation Mrs. Bilyeu stated: - "Current report of the 10S3 fund drive are such as to in dicate that the goal of $10,000 will not be attained. This will mean a drastic curtailment of chapter activities and natural ly salaries and other adminis trative costs. "Considering this situation and after much thought on my part I am hereby tendering my resignation as executive secre tary of the chapter to become effective at the end of the fiscal year, or as of June SO, 1953. "Kindly express my appre ciation to the members of the chapter board and yourself for the fine cooperation .. I have received at all times and be assured that I will always assist the chapter In any manner pos sible." Mrs. Bilyeu has been asso ciated with Polk - county Red Cross work for 20 years. She was active in volunteer work prior to the war and assisted on a voluntary basis during the war. When Mrs. A. J. Cleve- Five Timber Tracts Sold Five tracts of timber under the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Land Management and bav ins an aggregate volume of 18,- 830,000 board feet and an ap praised value of $327,786.00, were offered for sale on March 18. it was announced today by Acting District orester u. jr. Borne. A high sealed bid of M9,- 903 was submitted by Park Lumber Company of Estacada for a tract of timber in Clack amas county having an esti mated volume-of 700,000 board feet and appraised at $13,- 742.75. Other bids were re ceived from the J. D. Kerr Log ging Company of Estacada and Leo A. Balcom of Portland. A sealed bid offering located In Yamhill county and consist in z of 1.730.000 board feet ap praised at $31,761.50 received a high bid ol ?3tf,i4V.uu irom the Henry Logging Company of Dallas. The Riverside Lum ber Company of Sheridan also submitted a bid. For a Linn county tract hav ing an estimated volume of 7,900,000 board feet and ap praised at $163,309.50, Willam ette Valley Lumber Company's appraised price bid was the high bid. After spirited bid ding between Fred H. Stege man and the B. F.- Johnson Lumber Company, Stegeman submitted the high bid totaling S149.921.25 for a second Linn county tract of 6,330,000 board feet of salvage timber appraised at $113,572.25. No bids were received for a salvage sale located in Benton county involving an estimated 170,000 board feet of bug killed and wlndthrown timber ap praised at $3,400.00. Acting District Forester G. F. Home reports that since the offered timber is ciassuiea as salvage material, bids for not less than the appraised price may be re ceived during the next 90 days and the timber may be market ed in any O&C marketing area. Upon receipt of a valid bid, the bid will be posted for five days during which time other bids may be submitted. If no other bids are received, tne contract may be awarded to the sole bidder following the five day posting period. A number of tracts have been processed and will be offered at the next sale scheduled tor April 13, 1953. Ml East German President Wilhelm Pieck (above), 77, was reported in an East Ger man hospital suffering from pneumonia and pleurisy. These same madadies took the life of Czech President Klement Gottwald last week. Unlike Gottwald, Pieck did not attend Stalin's funeral. (UP Telephoto) land resigned as chapter sec retary after serving through the war, Mrs. Bilyeu accepted the position about six years ago. Prior to her appointment as executive secretary, she was administrator of county wel fare. . Mrs. Bilyeu, together with Dr., and Mrs. A. B. Starbuck and others, was instrumental in the development of the local Red Cross unit., She is past state president of the Federation of Women's clubs, a former secretary . of the Dallas Chamber of Com merce for a number of years, and twice served as president of the Dallas Woman's club. Stayton DAVs Dinner Hosts Stayton Members of the Stayton Marl-Linn Chapter No. 33, Disabled American Veter ans, gave a pot luck dinner Monday night and were hosts to DAV Department officials and guest members from Sa lem Chapter No. 6, Oregon City Chapter No. 4, Dow Walker Chapter No. 25, Portland, and Portland Chapter No. 1. Department officials attend ing were: Samuel E. Booth, Portland, Department Com mander; James Callaway, Sa lem, Department service-Commander; Dorr Quayle, Port land, Department Treasurer; Gerald S. Kelsey, Portland, National Service Office; Arch L. Brewster, Salem, Depart ment Legislative Chairman; Mrs. Blanche Zielinski, Oregon City. President Department Auxiliary, and Mrs. Olga Van Langinham, Oregon City, Treasurer, Department Auxil iary. ' The local chapter was insti tuted last year and has a mem ber ship of 21 members. Clar ence Jones is. the Commander and Francis Lott, Adjutant. Plans were formulated Mon day night for the formation of an auxiliary in connection wnn the local chapter. . . CRASH HOSPITALIZED 3 Newberg (U.R) Three Coos Bay residents were hospitalized here following a two-car col lision on highway 99W, half a mile from Dundee. Driver of one car, Milo Luther Clark, 60, Coos Bay, suffered a fractured leg, broken wrist and cuts on the . head. His wife and son were injured less seriously. Donald Ardell Musgrove, New berg, was shaken up. - Lebanon Hears Hospital Loss Lebanon Speaking at a Chamber of Commerce dinner Monday night, Bishop Allen Erb, administrator of the Leba non community hospital, said that the institution which open ed last August showed a cash loss of $5000 during its initial months of operation, but that during February It was 79 per cent occupied. Patients totaling 1286 were treated there during the first six months, 60 per cent being Lebanon area residents. He ex plained that, there' are times when every bed in the 50-pa-tient hospital is filled and every bassinet occupied. During Feb ruary 81 babies were born at the community hospital, an all time high in local records. At present the hospital em ploys 71 persons and has a monthly, payroll of $10,000. Rates charged, he emphasized, are equal or beloW the average in other hospitals on the Pacific coast. Devoting part of his address to Europe from which he re cently returned, Bishop Erb said that recovery there 'ap pears marked. He cited the production of the Ruhr and the building boom in Frankfort He noted that the countries gen erally are not so industrialized as he had supposed, but rich in agriculture. V He expressed surprise at the security in the non-industrial ized farm area and wondered u thla nation, with Its highly mechanized processes could so quickly produce a harvest if implements and industry were destroyed. Th administrator .was im- nreued bv European thrift in contrast to American waste which he said was pronounced in both urban and rural areas. Nab McMinnville . Escapees in Idaho Caldwell. Ida. W0 Four nriaaneri who escaped from the Yamhill, Ore., county Jail were held here today awaiting return to McMinnville, Ore. The prisoners escaped Tues day night by digging a hole through the wall of an old brick cell. Caldwell Police Chief Keith Judd said the four were arrest ed yesterday when Chief Bill Dunn in nearby Parma, Ida., became suspicious. Two of the men went into a service station and the other two drove off. The first two then turned in their companions saying they had stolen the car. Officers from Caldwell and Parma then arrested all four without resistance. All were unarmed. The escapees were Samuel Barnett, 24; Don Van Laanen, 19: Norman Beaver, 18, and James Brady, 21. Algae include plants of many forms from single cells to many-branched structures, a diversity, not found in any other type of plant. Penney Store Has Big Sign . Installation of a new 25-foot electric sign has just been com pleted on the front of the J. C. Penney Company store at 160 North Liberty. This, added to the recently Installed new type city light ing helps make this block of the city truly a "great white way." v ' The new sign, lettered PEN ney's, is of yellow background with black fetters, and is so placed as to be conspicuously noticeable to northbound mo-, torlsts from the time they top the rise on South . Liberty street. Manager Ray McKlnnle said: "I got sick and tired of hav ing out-of-town people and tourists tell me they had driv en through Salem en route north on Highway 99 and did n't know there was a Penney store here. Of course there are several thousand residents of Salem and Marlon county who already know where Penney's is located, but we want the tourists and visitors to know it also. Hereafter they will know if they can read." During the day the sign Is plainly visible for several blocks from Doth north and south, and it is particularly de-' signed to emphasize the im portance and effectiveness of plain, clear two-color work. The sign itself weighs ap proximately one ton, and the street in front of the Penney store was closed to parking and pedestrian traffic during the daytime hours while its instal lation warf in progress. The men and heavy mechanical equipment necessary for this job were furnished by the Elec trical Products Corporation of Oregon, and the wiring instal lation was completed by the Walton-Brown Electrical com pany of Salem. Farm Bureau Reorganized Dallas Reorganization of the Polk County Farm Bureau, consolidating all units of the district into one center, was disclosed Thursday. The reorganization meeting was held in the Greenwood school Monday, March 16. Officers elected to head the new organization are: Don Bis bee, Independence, president; Bill Cadle, Rickreall, vice, president; Herman Gillam. Perrydale, secretary-treasurer; Ernest Maxson, .Perrydale, voting 1 delegate; Ken Keyt, Perrydale, alternate .voting delegate. ' Hertb B artel was appointed to represent the Polk County Farm Bureau in a malting bar ley contest at the county fair. Mrs. Beatrice Warden, Farm Bureau insurance agent from McMinnville, explained- new and broder coverage offered by the organization. Rickreall Grange hall was adjourned by Dan Van Otten. miu m ill r ' A ft . K wti! i .7tf3 I-:: m : f l lilliA l?r -- If ' v I - f II it ivy j ii v . ii x " r f ii LI I Seagram's 7 Crown. Blended Whiskey. 88.8 Proof. 65 Grain Neutral Spirits. Seagram-Distillers Corporation, N.Y. flBDSIN -UNVEIL IF CAE! 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