Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 21, 1953, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE CAPITAL JOURNAL,' Salem, Oregon
Friday, 'Aaswt SI 1I5S
Capital Journal Carriers Leavina for Jantzcn Beach
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Eugene Boy Offered Oklahoma Home 23rd Birthday
Of Margaret
Reserve Board
Buys U.S. Bonds
Washington The Fed
era Reserve Board, faced with
i renewed tightening in the sup
ply of money and credit, has
ftepped back Into the securl
tie market to ease the situs
tion. '.
The board's regular state
ment of reserve bank accounts
Thursday showed that during
' the week which ended Wednes
day the board bought 44 mil
lion dollars worm of U. S.
securities in the open market
It took this action after s six
weeks absence from the securl
ties market, during which re
serves of member banks above
legal requirements had fallen
steadily and member banks
considerably increased their
borrowing . from the reserve
system. "
Excess reserves represent
unused lending power of a
bank. Falling excess reserves
therefore ordinarily' indicate
tightening supplies of credit.
When credit becomes scarces,
it tends to slow down business.
Fifty-five Capital 'journal carriers who qualified by
each securing 14 new "starts" are shown today leaving
In a specially chartered Hamman bus for Jantzen Beach,
Portland, for an outing. Twenty-nine of the group are
from Salem, 26 from outside communities.
Churchill Calls
Meeting of Cabinet
London (r Prime Minister
Churchill Friday told this va
cationlng ministers to be back
in London for another meeting
of the cabinet next Tuesday.
This will be the second cabinet
meeting the 78-year-old
Churchill has presided over
since doctors ordered him to
take a rest from affairs of state
two months ago.
Longest Flight
Off Jet Fighters
Lakenheath, England W
Twenty-five F-84 - Thunderjet
fighters landed here and In
Morocco Thursday night after
the longest non-stop hops ever
made by single engine Jets.
They came from Turner Field,
Ga.
The planes were refueled In
the air by tanker aircraft
Eight of the planes landed
at Nouasseur, Morocco, 4,475
miles from Turner Field. The
others touched down at Laken
heath, 4,485 miles from the
Georgia base.
Three others that started
with the group reportedly land
ed at Keflavlk Airfield, Ice
land, to refuel before coming
on to Lakenheath.
The Atlantic crossing took an
average of 11 hours and 20 min
utes, the Air Force said.
Hodge Charged
With Murder
San Rafael, Calif. (UB Ray
mond C. Hodge, 37-year-old
ex-convict, was charged with
first degree murder today In
the death of Roy V. Kappahn,
whose hacked and beaten body
was found on Mt Tamalpais
last June. ,
District Attorney William
O. Wcisslch said Hodges
would be brought today from
San Quentin prison, where he
Is being held, to municipal
court to enter a plea, to the
charge.
Hodges was implicated In
the crime Monday by his al
leged accomplice, Duane Al
bert Hall, 40, who himself
confessed to the killing,, but
claimed it wss Hodge's Idea.
The two men have been held
pending trial since their ar
rest in Medford, Ore., June 19.
WHY SUFFER?
USE
Schaefer's
CORN
REMEDY
C No relief,
JL3C No pay.
SCHAEFER'S
DRUG STORE
Oprn Pally 1:S A.M.- tML
Bandars I A.M. 4 PJW.
1S5 N. CemmrrrUI
Phone J-M97
Alaskans Ask
For Statehood
Fairbanks. Alaska (ff)
Farmers and businesmen out
lined to a Senate committee
Thursday night the difficulties
they said they encounter In op
erating under a territorial form
of government
They were among 18 witness
es who appeared before the
Senate group a subcommittee
of the Senate Committee on In-'
terior and Insular Affairs at
the concluding session of the
Fairbanks phase of statehood
hearings being conducted in
the territory.
. The committee, headed by
Sen. Butler (R.-Neb.), will
move to Anchorage for another
session Monday after week-end
trips to Pt Barrow and Nome.
Thursday night' switnesses,
most of whom spoke in favor
of statehood,- Included Dick
Swain, a union business agent
Fairbanks Mayor Ralph J. Riv
ers, and Cecil Wells, a Fair
banks automotive dealer.
Swain, a' homesteader, told
the six senators that develop
ment of farms in Alaska is ex
tremely difficult under the
present territorial form of gov
ernment He said statehood
would solve Alaska s agricul
ture problems.
Printers Vote
Defense Fund
Detroit UB Delegates to the
AFX, International Typographi
cal Union convention voted ov
erwhelmingly last night to con
tinue the ITU's strategic de
fense fund.
The fund, used to publish
competing newspapers in areas
where ITU printers are on
strike, was a topic of hested
debate among the 400 delegates
attending the union's 95th an
nual convention.
The union's Independent par
ty, headed by John J. Conley
of Dallas, contended the $13,
000,000 fund should be discon
tinued because the union
shold not be in the publishing
business.
The vote was a victory for
ITU President Woodruff Ran
dolph, who also heads the un
ion's ruling Progressive party
which supported the future use
of the fund in dealing with
strike-bound publishers.
Conley attacked the fund on
grounds It created "hate and
bitterness" between publishers
and the union.
Brazil Rejects
Pal O'Brien
Rio De Janerio, Brazil (ff)
Hong Kong s "man without a
country" still hasn't found one.
Brazil says she won't have him.
The rejection was nothing
new for Michael Patrick O-
Brien. After he got out of Com-
munist China with Red Cross
papers on a ferry boat last
year, both the British at Hong
Kong and Portuguese at Macau
refused to let him go ashore.
He traveled back and forth
on the ferry between the two
Asian colonial ports for 10
months until the Brazilian con
sul in Hong Kong issued him a
visa to come to Brazil as a
refugee. He flew to Le Havre,
France, boarded a liner and ar
rived in Rio Harbor Thursday.
But the Brazilians had
changed their minds. They re
fused to let him land. Police
said he would be sent back to
Le Havre on the same liner.
Authoritative sources said the
refusal was based on printed
reports he had been involved
in drug smuggling, a charge
O'Brien denied.
Fire Menaces
Amity Elevator
Amity Fire, which was
started by friction of a belt,
for a time threatened destruc
tion of the Burlingham-Meek-er
grain elevator at Amity
Thursday morning.
Workmen in the elevator
spotted the blaze at its incep
tion, and turned In an alarm
through an alarm box at the
plant, then attacked the flames
with fire fighting equipment
at hand.
With the help of farmers
who were waiting to unload
grain, the workmen kept the
fire under control until the
fire department arrived and
extinguished it
Damage to the plant was
small, according to P. E. Meek
er, manager.
Norman Smith suffered a
lacerated finger while fighting
the fire.
McMinnville Boy
Drowned in Lake
McMinnville (U.B Daniel
Roy McKinney, Jr., 14, route
2, McMinnville, drowned yes
terday while swimming in
Rainbow lake 12 miles north
west of here, Yamhill county
Coroner Glen Macy said today.
The body was recovered
about 8:25 p.m. by members of
the McMinnville volunteer fire
department.
He was the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel R. McKinney. Sur
vivors also include seven
brothers and two sisters.
Carriers Win
Jantzen Trip
Fifty-five happy Canltal
journal carriers left this fore
noon for Jantzen beach near
Portland for an outing earned
by gaining 14 or more new Ca
pital Journal subscribers.
The boys and girls were ac
companied by Chester Drees
zen, circulation manager: Art
Boyie, nis assistant; Bob Hart
ley and Keith Perkins. They
were oouna lor a day of fun,
with entertainment and a
luncheon. They were to return
wis evening.
Twenty-nine are from Salem.
26 from outside Salem: The
Dallas and Independence car
riers qualified for the trip 100
percent.
The Salem carriers who
made the trip were Gary Bar
tholomew, Dale Suran, James
Weiss, Tom Hueneke. Ronald
Rund, Bill Meier, Roger New
land, Danny Whitesell, Dick
Jaskoskl, Larry Patton, Jim
White, Bob Crowe, Allen Car
ter, David Kelley, Martin
Southwlck, Wayne Odom, Ira
Feitelson, Bruce Hansen, Justin
Woyke, Donald S t u h r , Larry
Mason, Larry Rothweiller,
-.ary nixier, Bin uavlsson,
Robert Bruce, Aria Fisher,
Don Johansen and Hal Cowan.
Out of town carriers were
Tommy Hill, Dennis Newton,
and Jim Baker, Independence;
Buddy -Algood, Stan Bevens,
Leroy Koop, Betty Koop, Larry
Dlehm and Sharon Pitzer. Dal'
las; Ben Sawyer, Sweet Home;
Maurine S c h ol 1 1 a n. Turner;
Larry BUyeu, Mill City; La
Verne Law, and Jim Bertram,
Lebanon; Eddie Anderson,
Brooks; Roger Klecker, Mill
City; Arland Sequin, Gervais;
Dick Rogers, Mehama; James
Noff and Sandra Burns, Mon
mouth; Wesley . Smith. Paul
Wadsworth and Lyle Nelson,
Woodburn; Dean Haug, Willa
mina; Joe Purdy and Larry Ol
sen, Stayton.
GOOLEY CHEST LEADER
Mt Angel Virgil Gooley,
assistant manager at the Mt.
Angel Farmers Union Ware
house company, will head the
local Community Chest fund
drive this year. The announce
ment was made by Leonard
Fisher and Carl Mucken, chest
directors.
homa City may turn out to be
that pot of gold on the end
of the rainbow for Roy Ed
wards, 17-year-old homeless
Eugene, Ore., youth.
Sheriffs officers found Roy
sitting dejectedly on the court
house steps. He told them he
had tried to locate his father
at Antlers, Okla., and failed.
His mother, he said, died re
cently in an auto accident
A quick check with his
hometown authorities showed
Roy was telling the truth. Of
ficers there said he had a fine
record, was an excellent foot
ball center 185 pounds and a
haseball catcher for Coburg
consolidated schools, eight
miles west of Eugene.
That's when the city decided
to take Roy to its bosom.
The sheriffs officers liked
the amiable youth and offered
to put him through high school
if he wanted to stay here. When
, the news leaked out, the phone
'at the sheriff's office began
; ringing off the hook. .
I An Oklahoma City couple
who lost their son in a Florida
i plane crash the tragic acci
dent that carried 24 University
of the Oklahoma ROTC cadets
to their death asked Roy if
he wanted to take the place of
their son.
"I think maybe we could do
something for him and he could
do something for us," the hus
band said.
Roy, meanwhile, not quite
ready to believe this Is hap
pening to him, is going to .take
a day or two to decide exactly
what he wants to do.
LONELY YOUTH BEFRIENDED
Car Production Will
Go on Despite Fire
Word has Just been received
here from the Pontiac, Oldsmo
bile and Cadillac organization
advising of plans to continue
production of cars, in some in
stances on a reduced basis, by
emergency steps made neces
sary by the disastrous fire of a
few days ago that destroyed
the plant In which transmis
sions for the cars were being
produced.
Cadillac will use a transmis
sion made available by Buick.
Pontiac is receiving a trans
mission from the Chevrolet di
vision, and Olds Is being aided
by Buick.
As a result production of the
three cars is expected to con
tinue steadily.
i
It I .mm . - I
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Balls ter, Scotland WV-It
was a champagne birthday for
Princess Margaret Friday.
The princess is 23. At Bal
moral Castle in Scotland, -where
she is having a holiday
with Queen Elizabeth II and
the Duke of Edinburgh, she re
ceived several hundred happy
birthday messages and numer
ous presents.
The champagne comes Fri
day night The Queen is giv
ing a little party for Margaret's
closest friends. Although the
yearly Balmoral Interlude in
the lives of the royal family Is
usually a period of easy infor
mality, there will be party
frocks in the castle's white and
rose drawing room during the
evening. '
. Roy Edwards. 17, Eugene, Ore., (center), has been be
friended by Oklahoma City citizens after he was found
sitting dejectedly in front of the courthouse. He told
officers he couldn't locate his father and his mother had
been killed in an automobile accident Several have of
fered to adopt the youth. Above, he confers with Deputy
Ross Biggers and Sheriff Roy Turner. (AP Wirephoto)
Tho
real
thing
Phone
41451
195 S. Commercial
MOTHERS . . .
Would yea like yoor 'very own child
to grow up with GOOD WHITE STRONG
Healthy teeth with ap to two-thirds less
tooth decay, with an enamel coat that's
whiter and so hard It's like an armonr
plate that resists decay, not Just temporarily bat with results
that can be permanent? D-H FLUORINE has those made tooth
bnildlnc powers and it's now within year power to add the
scientifically safe tested D-H Fluorine preparation to year
child's water, milk, or Juice at home. Now they can have a
better chance to grow ap with good, white, strong, healthy
teeth, with far leas tooth cavities. D-H Fluorine available at
PAY LESS DRUG STARE, 484 STATE STREET, SALEM,
OREGON. .
The small landlocked salmon
In Maine's lakes are very poor
eating. But they are vicious
fighters when taken on a fly
rod.
UIlVandWlIlVMlY
P&A4 CUPPINGS JU
HOPEWELL SCHOOL
Hopewell The Hopewell
public school will start Sept
14, according to decision reach
ed Thursday night during a
conference of teachers and
members of the school board.
Registration is scheduled for
Sept 11.
The first American fighter to
win the middleweight cham
pionship was Tom Chandler. He
defeated Dooney Harris in San
Francisco, April 13, 1867.
NO APPOINTMENT
NECESSARY
H
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AMERICA'S
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CAPITAL
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Amo-Truck-Fire jQ
0SK0 INSURANCE
AGENCY
146S N. Capitol St.
Phone 3-5661
Between Hood and Shipping Sts. on Hiway Going North
1288
State St.
Phone
3-6489
RAND AIL'S
HHIfll
mm grjf
Nowdays everyone is trying to help ease the strain on the old budget. Well, take a tip
from me . . . You can afford to EAT MEAT 3 TIMES A DAY when you shop at RANDALL'S
... For a long time now RANDALL'S has been supplying Salem with Quality Eastern
Oregon Hereford Beef. You housewives know how nice it is to have plenty of good beef
in the Deep Freeze or locker. Why not shop at RANDALL'S and see how TERRY RANDALL
can save you money . . . He'll give you friendly service and honest weight, plus all cuts
double-wrapped for your locker or freezer . . .FREE. Remember, you can buy as much meat
as you want one half, quarter or whole AND JUST LOOK AT THESE PRICES . . .
Fancy Eastern Oregon Hereford
Beef Roast
Arm Cuts Blade Cuts Rumps
Baby Beef
LIVER
ra
39
Fancy Eastern Oregon Hereford
Beef Steak
T-Bone Rib Steaks
Fresh Beef
Tongues
.43
.29
New Low Prices on Locker Beef
Best selection of Fancy Eastern Oregon Hereford beef. .Don't fail to take advantage of these prices.
may De arrangea. .noining aown a iuu year 10 pay.
.Convenient credit
Half of Whole
Front Quarter
Mr 2t If
Hind Quarter
ROUND STEMS . . . . , .T
BONELESS NEW YORK CUT . . . ,.59'
SIRLOIN TIP ROAST OR STEAK . . . ,,53'
BEEF TENDER LOIN . . . , 33'
FRESH BEEF HEARTS ......... lE. 29'
COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE
LB.
RBI
GROUND BEEF
GROUND ROUND -0'
tUN
SHORT RIBS
UM
BEEF CUBES
29'
J7'