Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, September 04, 1953, Page 10, Image 10

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    Friday. September 4, 1953
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem. Oregon
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3urrenaerson
Assault Charge
AlbknV The final cbipter
of an assault on Deputy Sher
iff Wade Collins at the Al
bany municipal airport Auf.
4. was written Wednesday
when Kenneth Morris of Rose
burf gave himself up and re
ceived a 40-day Linn county
jail sentence. Morris walked
Into the snerurt omce, was
immediately arraigned in dis
trict court, where he pleaded
guilty. He was also assessed a
$250 fine, which he has not
yet paid.
First of three, men involved
In the assault, made while
Deputy Collins was attempt
inc an arrest was Kicnara
Spencer, who paid $250 fine
and served a 30-day ail sen
tence which he has now com-
oleted. Still serving a similar
sentence is JacK uiuespie, wno
was apprehended later.
This year night review at the State Fair has the
Hawaiian theme, with many of the numbers by natives
of that Island Paradise. Pictured above are some of the
Hawaiian dancing girl
Commissioner Thurston
Passes at Georgetown
Washington V-Dr. Lee M.
Thurston, U.S. commissioner
of education aince July 2,
died early today at George
town University Hospital. He
was 58.
An appointee of President
Eisnhower, the Lansing,
Mich., native had been at the
hosoltal since suffering
heart attack August 29. An
office of education spokesman
said he died at 3.45 a.m. EST.
At his bedside was Mrs.
Thurston, who had originally
Hop Market
Turns Inactive
The market for Pacific
oast hops turned Inactive
during the last week of Au
gust reflecting light offerings
by growers and continued lim
ited demand, according to re
ports to the Market News
Service of the Department of I polt-
Agriculture.
come to .the capital to look
for place for her and .her
husband to live.
Dr. Thurston wss plunged
Into official financial prob
lems immediately upon as
suming his duties here last
July. With Elsnhower'a back
ing he fought in congress for
restoration of some" funds the
house had cut from federal
education appropriations for
this fiscal year.
Associates said that the
night before Dr. Thurston was
stricken he reviewed the of
fice's proposed budget for
1094-55, which is supposed to
be in the hands of the budget
buresu by September 15.
Besides the load of work
in Washington, the new com
missioner in his less than two
months in office had made
speeches in Nashville, Tenn.,
and Lansing.
Dr. Thurston was dean of
the School of Education at
Michigan State College at the
time he moved to the federal
He recently completed
Dealers and brewer were
quite alow In making addi
tional purchases at thl time
and were awaiting more new
crop samples, particularly fol
lowing the past week of rainy
weather which . caused some
damage to the crop In Ore
gon and Washington.
At the same time, a large
portion of the 1953 hop crop
was contracted prior to har
vest and offering were not
pressing.
Growers were generally
busy with harvest operations
. and were concerned In some
sections over the crop dam
age. Trading was so light as
to make determination of ac
tual market values difficult1,
and quotations were largely
nominal at the close of Au
gust. A few small lot sales of
1952 crop spot hops were re
ported as ranging from 25 to
27 cents per pound for seed
less, basis 8 per cent leaf and
stem content. The market for
1953 crop hops was nominally
placed at 37 to 39 cents per
pound for regular seeded clus
ters, 45 cent for fuggles and
40 to 42 cents on seedless bssis
per cent pick.
Inquiry for 1954 crop hops
decreased materially with no
trading reported In Oregon
and Washington, however 700
bales of 1954 seedless hops
were contracted In the Sacra
mento valley at 40 cent per
pound.
LEBANON MAYOR
Lebanon Glenn Gillenwat
r, eenlor member of the city
council, will act as msyor
during the absence of Mayor
Elmer Fitzgerald, who leaves
soon for vacation In the east
Gillenwater will preside at
the next meeting on Septem
ber 15 and the following meet
ing, Octboer 8. Fitiwatar is
expected back before the last
October session.
I four year of acrvice as state
superintendent of public
struction for Michigan.
in-
Hamilton Home
After Vacation
Rev. Harold E. Hamilton
will resume the pastorate of
Good Shepherd Lutheran
church of South Salem follow.
ing a month's vacation. He will
preach at the church service
on Sunday, September 8.
Good Shepherd church will
resume the regular order of
church services beginning Sun
day. Church school will be
held at 9:45 a.m. and church
worship will be at 11 a.m. Miss
Barbara Anderson will be in
charge of the music for the
church service. Richard Davis
will be acolyte for the 11 a.m.
service.
A special congregational
meeting of members of Good
Shepherd church will be held
on Sunday, Sept 13 at 12
noon, - immediately following
the church service to transact
Important church business.
Wreckage of
Bomber Found
McChord Air Force Base,
Wash. UP) Wreckage of a
plane discovered In Northern
British Columbia Wednesday
is that of the first B38 bomb
er ever lost by the Strategic
Air Command. Capt. James
Lynch, public information of
ficer at this base, said Thurs
day night
The wreckage was sighted
about 90 miles north of Smith
ers, B.C., by airmen searching
for Ellis Hall, Alouquerque,
N.M., oilman, and four others
who disappeared . in Hall's
plane August 17.
Fuselage numbers and other
information were relayed to
McChord and from them the
identity of the plane was es
tablished. The big plane was
lost February 14, 1950, while
on a flight from Alaska. Its
crew members parachuted
when the plane experienced
motor trouble near Princess
Royal Island, Just off the Brit
ish Columbia Coast
Twelve of the crewmen
were found but the other five
never were heard from again.
The spot where the crewmen
parachuted is over 200 miles
southwest of where the plane
wreckage was found.
Cant. Harold Barry, pilot of
the B36. said he put the craft
on automatic pilot before
jumping. The plane flew past
a long series of mountains,
some of them 8,000 feet high,
before cracking up on the 8,
000 foot level of one In its
path.
It's Once a Marine.
Always a Marine
Once a . Marine, always
Marine, seems to hold true for
on of the young men Kjlisted
in the Marine corps during
the month of August by the
local recruiting office.
The enlistee, James A. Sam'
uels. HI. of Corvallls, was
born at the Naval hospital at
Quantico, Vs., when his fa.
ther was in the Marine corps.
The father, James A. Samuels,
Jr.. spent 30 years in the Ma
rine corp prior to his retire
ment aa a Warrant officer.
During the month of August
six other men besides Sam
uel were enlisted in the Ma
'i iioi"WW mrrf' - mnl win' on 'ni 11 i . mi i n t i-y
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Search Made
For Two Bodies
The Dalles, Ore. UJ Coast
Guard boats, Waaco county
deputy sheriffs and private
river craft today searched for
the bodies of two men who fell
into the Columbia river yes
terday in two separate acci
dent. L. R. McKinney, 35, Oakland,
Calif., fell 80 feet from the un
finished interstate bridge near
The Dalles dam. Witnesses said
his body struck a concrete
abutment and rolled into the
river. McKinney wa a steel
worker employed by the Jud-son-Pacific-Murphy
Company.
His death would be the first
fatality on the project
Jimmy Hugson,27, a Celllo
Indian fisherman, slipped while
fishing from a sloping dipnet-
Implement row at the State Fair 1 filling rapidly with
all aorta of farm and Industrial equipment which leads
Leo Spitxbart, fair manager, to believe that the implement
display this year will not only be the largest but also the
most comprehensive in fair history.
litinc platform at Celilo Falls.
u.-u-j i
nil UUUJT W mvwmj wc-
recruitlne: office.
They were Franci C. Cun
ningham. Dallas, Ore.: Stanley
T. Irvin, Los Angeles; Richard
D. Pflug, Turner, Ore.; Car-
mon R. Estneimer, iiennan,
Wis.: Lester R. Stockbridge,
Hubbard, and Harold E. Howe,
Silverton.
Twenty-six states of the
United States rank travel
among their three biggest industries.
fore companions could come tqj
his aid. Other Indian said
Hugson was not using the cus
tomary safety line around his
waist
Linoleum
NATIONAL BRANDS
CAPITOL FLOOR
COVERINGS
217 B. High Ph. 45751
Registration Set
At Albany High
Albany While classes will
not convene for currlcuiar
work until Monday. Septem
ber 14, registration will start
at Albany Union High scnoo.
Tuesday, September 8, it was
announced by Superintendent
John Cox. -., ,
On that day. Cox said,
transfer students will register
from 1 to 4 p.m., preferably
in person. On Wednesday,
September 9 from 9 a.m., to 3
p.m., registration of all stu
dents will start.
It Is expected this will be
the last year spent in the
present building, a the new
Opportunity
Owner of paid-up Insiinnu on
liros cub vilues MAY be aMt to
double those values Immediately
with 100 safely. It costs noth
ing to find out. Will explain to
you AND your agent. v
MX 212, CAMTsl JMJSIU1
Union high school building,
under construction, 1 expect
ed to be completed by the
start of the next school year.
THEFT ON BIG SCALE
Matanza. Cuba u.O The
Yumuri Agricultural company
reported, today that a loco
motive, 18 railroad freight
cars and four . automtttlies
were stolen from a warehouse
during the night
Ahnut nine-tenths af the
wood harvest in the United I
States comes from private land, j
Arne G. Rae
DiesatUrbana
Urban. I1L .U.B Arne G.
Rae, professor of Journalism at
tha University of Illinois, died
at his home Thursday of cor
onary thrombosis.
Rae. 87, had been on the Illi
nois faculty 13 years.
He U survived by hi wife
and daughter. Funeral serv
ices will be Saturday.
Ra was born at Great Falls,
Mont, and attended Reed col
lege, Portland. After Army
service in World War I he wa
graduated from the University
of Oregon.
He worked as news editor ox
the Oregon City Enterprise.
Then he went to Tillamook,
Ore., where he was half owner
of the Tillamook. Herald until
1929.
Rae then held a position a
executive secretary of the Ore
gon State Press Association for
10 years. In 1939 he went to
Chicago a executive ecretary
of the National Editorial Asso
ciation. The average passenger car in
the United States uses about
650 gallons of gasoline a year.
VMIO'S MUTEST ,
fcitaflfic AdfancsaesJ
la Netriii Ud-
MAICO
Saaator Hotel HtoanlM
PEACH PICKERS
WANTED
LaFollette Mission Orchards
Adults only. Large fruit, heavy crop. Pay by
the box. Picker's harness necessary. Drive
north on North River road 1 mile past Keizer
school. Turn left 5 more miles to LaFollettes.
Ph. Salem 4-3058
OLDSMOBILE INVITES YOU
THE
ARMY HELPS VICTIMS
Tokyo W U. S. forces in
Japan have contributed (133,.
632 and a large amount of re.
lief goods to victims of recent
floods in southern Japan, Gen.
Mark Clark's Far East head
quarters announced today.
LtT0OA
FUEL OIL
. GEOORGE CADWELL
SERVICE STATION
25ti tad Slat ft o 27431
8 Big Days CAT
Starting
30!, 35 AFTER ( KIDDIB REE
Hpra
IMPROVED ELBERTA PEACHES
LaFollette's Mission Orchards
Premium canners, ripe and ready to can.
Available at orchard stand in Mission Bot
tom. Also on the Hiway 99E at Gervais Four
Corners.
Orchard Opr for U-Pkk 'caches
Saturday, September 5th. Irinf year containers.
Directions: Dri N. on North River Read 1 mile
Past Kiir School. Tam loft 5 mora miles ta
LaFOLLETTES Phone Salem 4-3031
LOOK rOB WORD LaFOLLIETTB'S ON BIG BED BABIf
I
THE "ROCKET REVUE"!
a t t
Come See Oldf mobile's Fabulous New Sports Car on Special Display!
You're heard about it! YouVe teen picture! And now ita
hrrt! It' Oldamobile'a FIESTA ...a gay and glamorous custom-
bodied convertible ... an exciting new "Rocket'' Engine sport
carl The low-elung, cut-down body is sleek and luxurious on the
long Ninety-Eight chassis. And the rakish sweep of a panoramic
windshield highlights a galaxy of stunning new styling features.
But best of all you can buy thia beauty! It can be ordered
today! So don't miss this chance to see the year'a most talked
about sports car. Come feast your eyes on the fabulous Fiesta!
.
See the Special Display
off !Rocket" Engine Cars!
IN THE GRANDSTAND AT
OREGON STATE FAIR
Sept. 5 thru 12
Sponsored by
LODER BROS.
465 CENTER ST.
GVfl . IB n
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