Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, April 14, 1953, Page 10, Image 10

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Flgi 10
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon
Tuesday, April 14, 1953
Largo River Bank Park
Proposed at Lebanon
v Lebanon Presented to the
city council by a committee of
, Klwanlang wai a matter plan
S to develop the 26 acres of city
5 owned property along the
South Santiam river into a
public picnic grounds and rec
reation area. The ground lies
i
NAVY BEAUT
Janice Vaughn, WAVE at
San Diego, Calif., Naval Air
Station, it believed to be
only member of Armed
Forces in Miss America con
test. She'i finalist in Miss
San Diego race. (UP Tele-,
photo)
Agreement on
Dispute Sought
Oregon CltyW) A proposal
designed to end the dispute
over O Sc . C lands will be dis
cussed at a meeting of county
officials here Friday .
Carl Holl, Douglas County
Judge and president of the
Association of O & C counties,
called the meeting to try to
get agreement on the propos
al, which then would be sub
mitted to the federal govern
ment. It calls for the O It C lands
to go to the Forest Service,
providing revenues from the
lands distributed on the O ti
C formula. The Forest Service
and the Bureau of Land Man
agement would be given three
years in which to exchange
lands to end intermingling of
holdings. The BLM now ad
ministers the O tc C lands.
The dispute has been over
about six million dollars of
O Ic C revenue that has not
been paid to the counties. The
federal government held back
payment because of a move
in Congress to cut down the
eo untie' share.
The O & C land cover about
150,000 acreas in Klamath
County and the counties of
Western Oregon.
Japan Would Try U.S.
GIs in Own Courts
Tokyo, (IMS Japan asked the
united States today for an
agreement that In effect would
allow her to try U. S. military
personnel violating Japanese i
laws.
In a note to V. S. Ambas
sador Robert D. Murphy from
Foreign Minister Katsuo Oka
taki, Japan asked for an agree
ment on criminal Jurisdiction
similar to that existing in the
North Atlantic Treaty Agreement.
The NATO agreement, now
under study in the U. S. Sen
ate, would give European
members of the Atlantic Pact
the right to try offenses com'
mltted by American service
men.
down river from the Grant St
bridge.
A spokesman for the Xiwan-
ians said the club planned to
clear debris from the area, con
struct picnic benches, tables
and fireplaces and would main'
tain the area.
Plans call for the use of the
present floodlights and launch
ing of a summer softball pro
gram for children. Twelve
teams have been pledged if the
park site Is developed, the Ki
wanians announced.
They also said that overall
plans call for the construction
of four tennis court along with
the ball diamond which would
be lighted.
The cooperation of several
other civic groups has been
promised to develop the park.
Representatives of the Wap
iti Bowmen club also appeared
before the council seeking the
right to use the large rustic
log building already on the
site as an archery clubhouse.
They agreed to clean the prem
ises and maintain the grounds
adjacent to the building.
They explained that taraets
wouia oe constructed for use
of all interested park patrons
once their program was under
way. ......
The council was unanlmnu
in favoring -the nroffram anH
the public property committee
was instructed to work with
ine juwanlans and bowmen In
drafting final plans for con
sideration at the next council
meeting en April 21.
FORUM SPEAKER
ft
4
Bible Program by
Class of Silverton
Silverton Frldav. Anrtl
a, at o pjn. will be the first
special program by the Silver-
ion mole school sponsored by
we ministerial association.
The program is under di
rection of the Silverton
Parent-Teachers association.
Miss Geraldine French is
Instructor of the school and
Is -having on display one half
Dean Seward P. Reese
Faculty Forum
To Hear Reese
Speaking on preparing for
the - "Coming Revolution in
Russia and Its Satellites," Se
ward P. Reese, dean of the
Willamette university law
school, will address the fourth
meeting of the University Fac
ulty r orum series at 8:15 Wed
nesday night in the music hall.
Reese will point out the ne
cessity for organizing a pro
gram to cope with the eventual
revolution which will take
place in Russia and its satel
lites. His delineation of prob
lems to prepare for will in
clude logistics, production of
consumer goods, land reforms
and Ideological aspects.
. The speaker will show that
proper preparation has never
been made for obvious eventu
alities and that concentration
has been applied heavily to bat
tlefield operations, with not
enough attention given to the
anermatn.
Watertown, N. Y. Honors Man
Who Put Bounce in Bed Springs
Watertown, N.Y. W The
town bounced out of bed to
honor the man who put the
spring In the bounce.
One hundred years ago,
James E. Llddy of Watertown
conceived of the bedspring,
bless him.
The idea was a natural for
Llddy, who worked for a car
riage maker. One Saturday in
1853, Llddy waited and wait
ed in his buggy while his wife
shopped. As it comes to all
men, impatience came to Lld
dy. He Jiggled up and down
on the buggy seat.
1 Then and there, he realized
buggy springs could add to the
comfor of beds as welh
Llddy died without realizing
any profits beyond that com
fort, however. He didn't have
the money to set up a business
and others used his idea. -
Miss Margaret Liddy, who
remembers her Inventive
grandfather as a kind man
with a long white beard, was
invited to be guest of honor at
a centennial luncheon Monday.
A miniature replica of the
first bedspring was produced
for presentation at the lunch
eon to the Jefferson County
Historical Society by Edward
L. Bronsteln, president of the
National Association of Bed'
ding Manufacturers. The as-
sociation sponsored the cele
bration.
And the Watertown barber
shop quartet chimed in with a
song written for the occasion
by J. Paul Fanning.
Here s how it goes:
"Seated in his buggy, flick-
in off the flies,
Waitin for his m Issues shop
: ping for supplies,
Wistfully James Liddy, in a
reverie,
Contemplated problems of
resiliency;
Shuddered at the specter of
that tangled web of ropes
Saggln neath his mattress In
perpetuated slopes
Suddenly he saw it, why of
all the simple things,
Under-prop the' mattresses
with carriage springs . . . "
'
Measles Continues
To Flourish Here
Measles the German vari
ety, as well as the more serious
type continued to flourish in
the county during the week
ending April 11.,
This is indicated by the
weekly report of the depart
ment of health covering com
municable and reportable dis
eases. In addition there was
one case of dog bite registered
There were 28 instances of
German measles, Including 11
reported from state institutions,
and 32 cases of measles. Of the
latter, 27 were listed as in the
city of Salem.
Other' instances of disease
reported by 86 per cent of the
county's physicians included:
nine influenza, six mumps, five
chickenpox, two whoopin g
cough and tuberculosis and one
each of syphilis, gonorrhea,
ringworm and impetigo.
Zellerbach's
Loses Tax Fight
Olympla W Washington
won a superior court battle
Monday to retain $235,676 in
business and occupation taxes
collected from the Crown
Zellerback Corp.
The firm had sued to re
cover the money, which was
collected on the basis of pro
ducts extracted and manufac
tured in Washington and sold
in Interstate commerce at
wholesale to customers out
side the state.
The corporation challenged
the constitutionality of the B
and O tax law, contending it
discriminated against inter
state commerce.
In his memo opinion Judge
Raymond W. Clifford denied
the contentions and said the
state had the right to tax the
corporation as a manufacturer
in as much as the company
had not been taxed as a re
tailer or wholesaler in this
same Instance.
Three Trustees Named
By Linfield College
McMinnville W) Three new
members of the Linfield Col
lege board of trustees were
named Monday.
They are Edgar Holliday,
Sacramento, representing the
California Baptist convention;
Henry Kerr, Brookings, repre
senting the Oregon convention,
and H. Wayne. Stanard, Mc
Minnville grocer.
Stanard headed a 1946 cam
paign for funds for the school.
Better Rural
Mailboxes
Week's Goal
' Better rural mailboxes for
Marion county Is a com
munity goal for the week,
April 12-18, according to Ben
Newell, county agent Farm
families throughout the na
tion will join that week in
the fifteenth anniversary of
the rural mailbox improve
ment campaign.
Cooperating with the Post
Office department in the
campaign are newspapers
and farm journals, youth
groups, rural organizations,
civic leaders, and the agricul
tural extension service.
Rural mailboxes are indi
vidually owned and main
tained and their appearance
is a matter of both personal
and civic pride, observed the
county agent. Although It is
not required that mailboxes
and their supports be paint
ed, it is the desire of the Post
Oltice that they be painted
white, preferably, or alumi
num. The owner siiould place
his name In neat black let
ters about one inch high on
the side of the box that is
visible to the carrier as he
approaches it. Where boxes
are grouped closely togeth
er, the name should be let
tered on the door.
NeweU said it helps the
rural carrier if neighbors
group boxes together when
ever possible, especially at
or near crossroads or other
Collage Grove Wile
Accidentally Killed
Cottage Grove, U.B The 19-year-old
wife of a Cottage
Grove lumber yard worker
was accidentally shot to death
yesterday by a gun held In the
hands of her husband, the Lana
county coroner's office report
ed today.
The coroner said Mrs. Olive
E. Tullar died almost instant
ly yesterday afternoon when a
gun being cleaned by her bus
band, Ellsworth M. Tullar, dis
charged. ,
Tullar, with gun in his
hands, attempted to keep their
10-month-old baby from fall
ing and the gun went off.
places where a considerable
number of boxes are located.
A convenient height for
boxes is 3W or 4 feet.
PROMPT -EFFICIENT
SERVICE
Bendix laundry Equipment
Electric Rangoi
Automatic Water Heaters
Dishwashers Dlihwaihers
F1- " JssBty(XtT atcowNiaciatti.
class work put on by pupils
or tne first to sixth grades.
Hex. Joseph A. Luthro of
the Trinity Lutheran church,
president of the ministerial
association, is to give an ad
dress on "History of the Bible
School." The film fn K eh swim
of the program hour, sample is "The Bible on the Table."
Hot H Proof
MILLIONS Ar Paying
Too Much for
VITAMINS!
Vitamin ere costing American- over
thru fauDdrect million dollar ar.
Much of thla Tut ium 1 apen td
ImsI. It' tlmo folkj talcing vitamins
hootd be told th piatn (icti, mop tu
tor TlUroin product iuit on lalth. pre
ilie and with th mlittken belief tha
Tilth price" mean "quality." You can
learn tnt truth and bo Informodl Mo
. longer need you complain about the high
oat of vitamin. Now you can get quick
proof If you art getting your money "f
worth.
Without coat or eolliatlon you may
at th answer to all the vitamin ouea
tlons. Do you know Juit what vitamin
can do for rout Do you know th tole
Uit or "quamy" in vitamin is "cor
not unltait"? Xi it dwlrabi to w i
UDPlement of mineral alone with vita-
mtnsT How effective It th new wonder
vi Urn In B-ia and roiio Acid in building
rich, red blood? At tnt llpotropio lec
tor Inositol, choline and vitamin Bl
r value in armiucierosu (hardening
f the arterlat) t If your heir U turning
ray, can vitamin be of nelpf If you
ore Juet fagged out about 4 o'clock every
afternoon, what' thti got to do with
Tltamlnef la there luch a thing a an
"anU-aterUltr" vitamin or what have
vitamin to do with aexf Can you be Im
mune from avltamlnoala by hoping to get
your vitamin in cereait, oread, nutter,
meat, vegetable and concocted drinker
Thee question and many other which
have perplexed thou ends of people are
anewered tn tbe moat Informative FREX
book on vitamins that ha ever been
written. It U elm pie, eaiy to understand
and fascinating, and molt lmportuit of
all, It will tU you how you may save
many dollar on your vitamin need.
You ihould not ml thli opportunity to
get the fact about vitamin without coat
or any obligation. Do not ipend a atntlt
penny for vltamlni until you get thli
book. Otop buying vitamin blindly. Bend
postcard today for thla free book and
catalog of over 100 product to VITA Ml n
OUOTA, ept. lt. 1LM Crenshaw Blvd..
155 N. Liberty
Phone 3-3191
WARDS
PAINT OF THE MONTH
Low Ward Prices
On Your Paint Needs
Wait
,rui s.Kt
SUPER FLAT WALL PAINT
1.10
Quart
Gallon
3.85
Add new soft color to your walls with Wards Flat
Wall Paint. Super's oil-base keeps it good-looking,
lets you wash it repeatedly. Brushes or rolls on
smoothly, primes itself. Many velvet-soft colors.
SS, -N' ' II - I one e lii c
REGULAR 1.53 QUART
Sale Price 1.32
4 Days Only
Highly water resistant, durable, gloss enamel.
Choice of several colors. Perfect for kitchen and
bathroom where water, grease and steam discolor
ordinary finishes. Gal. 4.57
Who got the most from
our customer dollar ?
i MEET1NG S
The employees?
The shureowiiers 1
N O I In wages, salaries and benefits, our employees received &U out of every
dollar paid in by Union Oil customers during 1952.
Our payroll, including benefits, totaled $50Ji million. Divided among our 8,754
employees, this amounted to an average of $5,810 per person.
"artrN
NO I Our profiU in 1962 were $27M mfllion, or 8Mof each
customer's dollar. Of this amount, our preferred and common
shareowners received per customer dollar. Total dividends
paid to our 40,802 owners of common shares averaged $261.3.
per person.
The remaining profits of 4itt per custodier doi
htr had to be returned to the busineas to hetp
pay for replacement of worn-out equipment and
necessary expansion required by tbe West's greatly
accelerated demand for petroleum prod nets.
The tax collectors?
YES I The federal, state and local tax eoHectura
got 183i of every dollar paid in by Union OA cus
tomers. In other words, they got mart than fin
times as much as the owners of the business and
tne quarter more than Union Oil employees.
The remaining 58'M of the customer's dollar
was divided among the many costs of doing busi
ness: raw materials, transportation; interest on
borrowed money; and wear and tear of facilities)
and exhaustion of nil nnri m i
UNION OIL COMPANY
OP CALIFORNIA
WCOIPOIATIO IN CAUtOtNM, OCTOIIi 17, lifO
To sum It op-1952 was the best sales year in our
62-year history. Yet the 40,302 owners of our
business received only a fraction over St from
every customer's dollar. That's far less than many
people in this country believe goes to the owners
of a big business.
its eri, sponsored Of las people o tVnim Oil Company, it dedicated to a discussion of how and uf
merican business functions, Wt hop you'll feel free to tend in any tuaaestions or criticiims n
This i
American business Junctions, Wt Hop you'U feel free to tend tn any tuaaestions or criticijmis n
tat to offer. Writs: Vit President, Union OU Company, Union Oil Building, Lot Angeles 17, California,
MaMfKtsrtrs K Ravtj Triton, Um Muzioi parpii motsr il
Log eingalta If, CtJli. OdrtrtlMmeat)