Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 10, 1953, Page 9, Image 9

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    Monday, August 10, 1953
.,.-JELiHL!j.CELEBItATES A CENTENNIAL
V"
'4
V J. T r
Top: About 300 residents and friends of the community
gathered at Scotts Mill park Sunday afternoon to reminisce
and hear speaker, relate community history over the past
100 years. Lower: Visitors were shown this house, said
. to be the oldest iivScotts Mills, where Robert Hall Scott,
miller for whom the town was named, made his home in
the 1860s. It is now occupied by Kenneth Jones and under
going renovation.
Lions Club Women Serve
Session as Baby-Sitters
Women bf the Lions Club
Auxiliaries of Salem and other
communities are going all out
for the fifth annual Institute
for Parents of Visually-handicapped
Pre-school Children,
now in session at Oregon
School for the blind.
Among volunteers as baby
sitters for parents attending the
institute. Sunday were three
women from as far away as
Phoenix, Ore., and others from
Portland clubs.
The Lions Auxiliaries and
the school are sponsors of the
Institute, which, says Superin
tendent Walter R. Dry of the
blind school, is the most suc
cessful yet held.
Twenty Oregon places well
scattered throughout the state
have sent nearly 70 children
to the institute with their par
ents. In a Sunday night address
Dr. Harold W. Bernard, pro
fessor of education in the Ex
tension Division of the Univer
sity of Oregon, cautioned par
ents against giving too much
attention to visually-handicapped
children, and stressed per
mitting the child to become
self-reliant.
A panel discussion "Train
ing for Independence and Self
reliance, as the Parent Sees it,"
developed much interest. In
the panel were Mrs. Donald
Prows and Mrs. George Wal
ter, both of Portland, and Mrs.
K. W. James of Grants Pass.
At today's session these
practical discussions were
heard:
"The Social and Emotional
'Development of Children," by
Dr. Carl V. Morrison, psychiat
rist for the Community Child
Guidance Clinic of Portland;
AMAZMO FAZO ACTS TO
RELIEVE PAIN
or mmmi PILES
INSTANTLY
tttran. Pt rimcta pin rr ro St
Amann Peo ana imfnUt t rrlie euek
aiieerel fkntm ra tmuet. Lobncatee hard
ana ran. Help heal OTcainf. reduce "
hi. Don't Mar needle jrn of ampto
HW Cm Pud. rx rati mtcn. Aik doctor
Stoma k. SopcMwtary (am or tab with pip
ftm CiumM 4 SaipilaM
-WHAT
Hard of Hearing Person
-SHOULD
CAN I OCT a hearing aid with
out anything in the ear? with
out any attachment to the head?
that doesn't need batteries?
without a cord?
that NO ONE I
will know 1 ant
nard of hear
ing?" A new FREE
booklet, "What
Every Hard of
Hearing Person
Should Know-
by the author of L. A. WATSON
600-page text on hearins Instru
ments, gives you the FACTS. It
tells the truth about hearing aids
can I get an aid pv. '3
I can wear no f ' fT?" 1
r'.T T rW -..." j
Vr 1
"The Implications of a Handi
cap," by John E. Taylor, spe
cialist for handicapped child'
ren for the State Department
of Education; "The School
Child He Needs Many Real
experiences," by Miss Madge
Leslie, consultant for the visu
ally-handicapped in the Port
land schools; and "Selection of
Toys," by Miss Mollle Vlasnik,
counsellor for pre-school blind
children. Monday night from
7 to 8:30 Mrs. Ida R. Stafford,
aslstant director of St. Helens
Pre-school, Portland, will con
duct a session on "Kiddies"
Love Stories."
The programs for Tuesday
include:
Qra 1
:1-10:1 air... "Wbr cnildran Sa
hara ea The? Do," br Hlu Vlasnik.
10 19-1:. eUKlualon.
1:10-19 p.m.. "School KeedlnaM,"
Ulu Vluntl.
141-1)0. macuuloa.
1:00-1:40- p.m.. panel on Tnt Rcca-
lar Nuricrr Schec-1 Fronde WorthwhUt
Experience for til Blind Child." br Mr.
Pearl Ooodwln, of St. Helen's Rail Kur
erj acbool, Portland: Mr. Paulina afu
ccua, of Berahert-Mueeua Nnratrr School.
Oregon City; and Mra. Marttrr Rob
erta, of Roberta Oar Oaro Hurry, Port
land. Groap II
1:16-10 10 a ra., "Cooperation Prom the
Commlaalon for iha Blind." Clifford A.
Stoektr, actlni administrator for com-
mission. Portland. "Handicap and Help
leaaneea They Nerd . Not Mean the
Sam." Arthur w. Wataon, eaperrUOT of
aoclal and oducatlonal rrlco for ooa-
nuilon for blind, rortiand.
10:3M1:M, dlacueilon.
1 10-14S p.m., parent panel "School
Don," Mra, Heitar Turner, Portland:
Mra. Walter Soderbmt. Astoria; and Mra.
Robert Murrey. Ore on Cltr.
:s-3:30. dleeuatlon.
S.DO-:0O p.m., panel, aa for Group I
Pres. Quirino May
Leave Hospital Soon
Baltimore W President El
pidio Quirino of The Philip
pines "has gained weight" and
should be ready for discharge
from Johns Hopkins Hospital
this week as scheduled, hospi
tal said last night.
A spokesman for Johns Hop
kins joined Dr. Agerico Sison,
Quirino's personal physician, in
saying the President continued
to respond well to his second
stomach operation at the hos
pital. EVERY-
KNOW-
and will tan you many hard
earned dollars.
DONT BUY UNTIL TOO
READ IT! until you know what
every healing aid user SHOULD
know.
I U A. WATSON, President
Medical Aeenatle
Instrument Co.
; Rm. SLs,
11 No. lrd St. Mpls, t Minn.
! ?! and rm booklet la Mam
oneelnoe "Wliel Eeery Hard Of Bear-
! in Pereoa snooid Ko -
RAW.
; ADDRSSS .......
tat M
e.v.e K ""i '-:r..r- ,d
Scoffs Mills
Celebrates ,
Scotts Mills concluded cen
tennial ceremonies Sunday
afternoon when about 800 res
idents of the town and their
friends gathered in the com,.
munity's sylvan park to picnic,
hear reminiscence, from old.
timers, see relics and photo
graphs of Scotts Mills in by
gone times and hear .peak'
er. for the occasion.
Scotts Mills was called Butte
Creek in early days and it
was here that a mill was estab
lished by Thomas McKay In
1853 and acquired before com
pletion by Michael Nowlin, an
Irishman who came to the Ore
gon country in 1851. Nowlin
was naturalized in Salem the
same year he acquired the
grist mill on Butte creek.
In 1866 Robert Hall Scott, I
a native of Canada, came to
these parts and acquired the
mill from Nowlin, who had
greatly improved it and was
then producing flour for a
wide local distribution.
Scott further increased pro
duction and by the 1880s the
Butte Creek mill was grinding
60 barrels of flour a day that
were hauled to. Downs station
on the narrow gauge railroad
and shipped to distributors. A
post office was established at
Scotts Mills November 1, 1887,
and the first postmaster was
Thomas Scott In 1892 Scott
moved much of his milling pro
duction to Woodburn. He died
in 1897.
Scott's mill was operated in
1903 when the population was
near 300. Some decades ago
the mill was razed and only
foundation stones and a few
scraps of lumber mark the site.
Today', population of .Scotts
Mills is given a 217.
Free Heot for '53
See Radiant
GLASSHEAT
1 540 Fairground Rd.
Phone 4-6263
The biggest shea sale ta
Mow! -n
Salem . . . Famous brand. Buy the first pair at tha reg
... all at exactly 2 for trier price ... get the see
the Price of 1! and pair FREE!
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Orecoa
Rain in Many
Areas of U. S.
IBr Tta Aeexlate4 rt
Another day of moderate
temperature was in (tore for
most of the nation Monday,
and more showers sprinkled
the eastern Great Lakes re
gion, southern New England
and coastal areas of the Caro
linas and Florida.
Some portions of the Rocky
Mountain region also were in
for another wetting.
Heavy thunderstorms Sun
day brought 1.18 inches of
precipitation to Goodland,
Kan., including one to one and
a half Inches of hail. Billings,
Mont, also had hail. Other
Sunday precipitation figures
included Cape Hatteras, N.C., ,
2.45; Orlando, Ha.. 1.S9; Ak
ron, Ohio, 1.06, and Roches
ter, N.Y., 1.71.
Temperatures of 100 or ;
more were recorded only in
states along the Mexican bor
der Sunday. The overnight
low was 38 at Grand Marias,
Mich.
Prisoner Fails
In Escape effort
Medford UP) Raymond
Hodges, being held here in
connection wth a California
laying, failed Sunday in an
attempt to escape from Jail.
He tricked a jailer into
opening his cell door by drop
ping his breakfast tray.
George Mead, the jailer, was
knocked unconscious.
Another jailer, Reuben L.
Janzen, subdued Hodges by
striking him on the head with
heavy ring of jail keys.
Hodges, 37, San Francisco,
and Duane R. Hail, 40, Salinas,
Calif., were arrested last June
for questioning about the
death of Ray Ellsworth Hap-
phahn. His body was found
on Mt. Tamalpais in the bay
area some time before., They
are being held for California
authorities.
Precedent Broken
In Aid to Turkey
Washington () Tht Inter
national monetary fund has
broken precedent to help Tur
key over a rough economic
spot, perhaps heralding more
liberal future policies.
The fund, set up after World
War II wa. an independent
agency of the United Nations,
announced Sunday it was buy
ing 20 million dollars worth
of Turkish lire. This amount
ed to 48.5 per cent of Turkey's
43 million dollar quota. Prec
edent had set a 25 per cent
maximum.
TOP GUERRILLA KILLED
Kuala Lumpur. Malaya VP)
Chan Pun, 31, a high ranking
communist guerrilla, was
among five rebels killed in a
raid by government security
forces Sunday night
Tele-fun
by Warran Goodricll
"I'd better so if my fria
Iw. new itwrnber. I hcrvent
railed rain fevogM."... When
you're not sure of a number,
please look it up before yon
call . . . Pacific Tekpbocva,
SHOE
SALE
LEON'S
Shown is Mrs. Sheila Ryan Laue, 251 South 17th street,
receiving keys for the 1953 Packard car she won in a
national Invitation of the Month contest from H. J.
Eisner, local Packard distributor. From left: Al Laue,
holding Christopher, 2 to and Gretchen, 1H years old,
Mrs. Laue with Timothy three weeks old, receiving the
keys from H. J. Eisner, J. H. McCord, zone manager; D.
W. Embre j, district manager and N. A. Kenned) of Eisner
Motor Co.
Nudists End
Annual Meeting
Cajon, Calif. VP) The un
clad clan-members of the
American Sunbathing associa
tion, put on their clothes and
headed for home Sunday.
The week-long epidermis
baring, officially, the nudists'
22nd annual national conven
tion, concluded with the selec
tion of "sunbeams," the cutest
little nudists on the grounds.
"Mrs. Sunbeam" was Mrs.
Marguerite Hamrick of Bur
bank. Winner of the "Mr.
Sunshine" title was David
Weisner of Sunnyrest Lodge,
near Palmerton Pa. The sun
bathers re-elected Mervln
Mounce Spokane Wash., pres
ident E5A
1288
State St.
Phone
3-6489
Buy Locker Beef Now!, We recommend the purchase of Fine Eastern Oregon Her. ford Beef at Hit time because
the price is definitely right and Hie quality is good. The U. $. Department of Agriculture recommend, your
jtonng food, for the freezer for the soma reason. We accept and pan on to you the recommandation of the U. $.
Department af Agriculture because it i. sound judgment to purchase your meats and other foodstuffs at a sea
sonally low price and store them for use at a later dote when the market might normally be higher. Wa offer yea
this opportunity to buy meats net only at a seasonally low price, but with a large wholesale discount besides.
Whether you wish a quarter or a half of Beef or any number of retail cuts, we know we can save yea money. Our
price, quality considered, is the best in the State of Oregon. The weight is guaranteed ta be honest and you will
find our service to be courteous and helpful. Any of our retail cuts double wrapped for your locker Free! Ian
ta buy a weeks supply. Shop Randall's Market and save!
Fancy Eastern Oregon Hereford
Beef Roast
Arm Cuts Blade Cuts Rumps
Baby Beef
LIVER
New low Prices on Locker ieef
Best selection of Fancy Eastern Oregon Hereford beef. .Don't fall to take advantage of these prices. .Convenient credit
may be arranged. .Nothing down a full year to pay.
Half of Whole Front Quarter Hind Quarter
llMvc vc 33c
JLnKdJ lb j i-J tzU lb. 1 td tdJ lb.
ROUND STEAKS.
BONELESS NEW YORK CUT . . . .
SIRLOIN TIP ROAST OR STEAK .
BEEF TENDER LOIN . . .
FRESH BEEF HEARTS
COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE ...
RBI Tlrkt UAH
GROUND BEEF , 2S) SHORT RIBS
" : lira
GROUND ROUND -
MRS. LAUE RECEIVES HER PACKARD
-;Vl,--
Lawrence McElhaney
Dies in Pittsburgh
Word has been received in
Salem of the death from a
heart attack in Pittsburgh
Pa., of Lawrence McElhaney,
a former Salem resident.
McElhaney, who was a
brother of Mrs. F. A. Riede.el,
Do You Know?
Yn hare KhabiUtaUen for the
handicapped In your attic and
closets?
Send repairable articles which
can provide work and wages
U the
Goodwill Industries
ot Oregon
TELEPHONE 4-Z24S '
Ptckaps Taeadayi: Wist Saleea
Fridays: North of Center
MID ALL'
FINEST
Affciifii mr
lb.
c
lb.
33
39
(I
Lois McElhaney, Edna McEl
haney and Byron McElhaney,
all of Salem, is also survived
by his wife, two daughter, and
a granddaughter.
ill -
- WIS
rs. , v i -
l-aSSSaBabae.1 ' X T. . f V"-SVSBr SB
Fency Eastern Oregon Hereford
Beef Steak
T-Bone Rib Steaks
Fresh Beef '
Tongues
I BEEF CUBES
Ptrtf
U
tajoavl ) rni
Receipts U? f:r Yc:r
Portland () Liquor sale In
Oregon were down but receipts
were up for the year ended
June 10, the State Liquor Com
mission reported Saturday. .
The commission Mid 1,503
fewer gallons ct liquor war
sold last year than during the
previous year. A total of 831,
645 cases of alcoholic bever
ages were sold a declina of
3,117, the commission said.
Sales at 42,B05,7U war -up
3 32 per cent over the pre
vious year.
Phcr.3
4-1451
195S.Cc.7.r::rci:l
SAVINGS
EARN
SOONER
at Salem FedanJ
Money placed in your ac
count during the first 10
day. of any month, earn
from the 1st of that month.
Start now earning our ear-
rent rate of per annum.
-J
60 Stat f tract
uisHomoN
Ope tie 4 Dally,
StaltBatarday
a.m
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V W
mU.
S Have... I
,43'
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