tf XI m CAPITAL JOURNAL, laltae, Oregr rridy. Sapttmbtr 11, 1953 . GRAND CHAMPION 4-H -' V r.iiH..gl,lli.:w,l jpii i 3 Acrobatic Generations Back of 2 Amin Brothers FAMILY OF ACROBATS r Thcrt't three generatioat of acrobatic training behind the balancing aet of the Am In brothers, Mustafa and Abdou, that on mi at the nifbt revue at the State Fair. Theie 4-H Club member from Washington county won the Grand championship at the Oregon State Fair Thurs dry for the but herd exhibited by any one club. They are from left, Jo Even, Janice Inglei, Joan Ireland, Marilyn Ireland and Jess McNiel, all of Foreit Grove. McNeil if ahowing a heifer owned by Joe Ever. Tvo Grand Champions Dominate Beef Judging By CLAUDE STECSLOFF An Angus cow and a Here ford cow, each grand entropion of their breed and prominent in showmanship, contests, do minated FFA beef judging at the State Fair yesterday. Jim Coffield of XsUcada, owner of the Angus, used her for the showmanship contest winning the. grand champion ship. The Hereford, owned and shown by Glen Wagner of Me Minn villa, helped him to win the reserve : champion show snonabip award. Judge Dick Richards com mented that he noted the Here ford cow was a bit nervous during the showmanship con test Inquiry revealed that she might ' have - been worrying about a wee calf the left back In the stock -barn. Richards said he thought he should take this fact Into consideration un til be was Informed that the Angus had left two calves be hind. Junction City chapter was awarded the new beef herd plaque donated by the First National Bank of Portland. David Warren, Shedd, was made champion FFA sheep showman In sheep Judging con cluded late yesterday. John Clark of Independence-Mon mouth chapter was champion showman of the long wool di vision. Jack Humphrey ox Car- vallia had the champion fat . Jamb or the fourth straight time in a rather slender show in of Jet lambs. Don Papke, Turner, won the aged Romney wo class; as well as the Rom ney owe blue ribbon. Howard pear of Turner showed ' the first priao Columbia ewe lamb. Bob Banick, Brooks, took all fsrst placet with Hampshires. Along with attendance, egg production at the fair It bit odor last year. Poultry de- Mttsaent statisticians say the BSO chickens, an undetermined number of which are roosters. tn yielding about 16 eggs per Albany Damage Suit Sstfasnt Made Albany All evidence was In, arguments had been com pleted and the Jury had retir ed at the conclusion of the $22,000 damage ease of Ray Clyde Nelson vs. William D. Fartch in circuit court Wed nesday night. When court convened Thursday Judge Fred Mc- Henry, presiding, dismissed the case when apprised that a settlement had been reached. The trial started Tuesday. Outside the courtroom it was reported that a settlement of $8300, to be paid by the de fendant to the plaintiff, had been agreed upon. The case arose from a col lision near Sweet Home Jan. 11, 19S2, between cart driven by the two litigants, as Nelson was near the entrance of a driveway. Nelson contended he had cleared the roadway but Partch claimed he had not HBKI FIRES MINISTERS Seoul (M-President Syng snan Rhee fired two cabinet ministers Thursday on charges of falling to carry out their duties. day. Output of some ISO hens In the 4-H division is unknown since their eggs are picked up by the youthful owners. For the third straight year Bob Barnes of Monroe won the 4-H sheep shearing contest, but slightly wounded himself in the process with a mis- stroke of the shears. However, both his sheep came through unscathed and he won going away with a score of 81 points. Henry Williams of Klamath Falls scored 76 points and second place; third went to Glen Klock of Multnomah. He scored 73.5 points. Leonard McCaleb Judged a select showing of Angora goats. Both the buck and doe purple ribbons went to Cecil Springer of Harlan. Other first place winners included Russel Alsip of Monmouth and Dan Spring er, Harlan. Judging for the 1893 State Fair ended with the 4-H dairy competition. Eugene Fisher of Albany showed the champion Jersey; Frank Maynard of Mc Mlnnville, champion Guernsey; Joe Even, Forest Grove, cham pion Holsteln; Beth Gessiord, route 1, Box 218, Portland, champion Ayrshire; Harold Berger, HUlaboro, champion Brown Swiss ana ueorge nan dall, Salem, champion Milking Shorthorn. The calves of th annual Holsteln Calf Selection Day had a rather indifferent recep tion, though they were priced reasonably, two were left tin selected. Only one went to a veteran. Nick Sumlch, Blach- ly, bought a Grimes brothers heifer tagged at $273.- two went to FFA boys. Amity chapter bought a C.R. Evans calf at $160; Scio chapter paid $249 for an A. P. Ireland calf. 4-H buyers were: Larry. Coate. Harrisburg, $270 to Benton Farm, Creswell; James ingles. Forest Gtovo, $20 to Rudy Lurcher, Tillamook; Douglat Krueger, Portland, $229 to John Dllly,- Gary Krueger, Portland, $200 to John Dllly: LeRoy Van Donv leu. Forest Grove, $240 to A. P. Ireland and Robert Krue ger, $225 to Van Baver. One of the largest contests of the livestock division will be conducted Saturday when 400 FFA boys will take part in dairy, beef, swine, sheep and poultry Judging.-The winning team of eacb section will go to the national contests In Kansas City, Mo., and Waterloo, la. Oregon Swine Growers held a meeting yesterday afternoon and set Feb. 6, 1S94 as the date of the -annual bred gilt sale at the State fairgrounds. Their annual meeting will be No vember 12 at the Senator ho tel, Salem. Lebanon Asks Harvest Help Lebanon Another urgent request for bean pickers in this section was made Thursday by officers of the Lebanon state employment office. They say 300 to 400 more persons are needed Immediately. One ' field has completed picking, but others are reach ing peak harvest Coupled with this is the lack of workers. csused by attendance at state fair, and the opening of many rural schools this week. A need will also exist Mon day for prune and blackberry picxers. Robbery Suspects Taken fo Court Albany Brouaht before District Judge Wendell Tomp kins Wednesday to answer to charges of robbery while arm ed, Louis StogsdUl of Shedd was still without services of counsel to Judge Tompkins appointed Ray Matt hies to de fend him. Mrs. Lottie Stoasdill. his mo. thcr, charged with being an accessory to last week's hold up of a Peoria trocerv store by her son, was without serv ices of an attorney. Judge Tompkins named Robert Me- Kechnle to defend her. The court continued the case for later docketing. Trade Facts Are Available Businessmen in Salem now have ready access locally to needed trade promotion inform ation developed by the U. a Department of Commerce fol lowing the signing of a cooper stive office agreement with the Salem Industrial Development Council, E. Burr Miller, chair man of the public relations committee, announced today. By this arrangement the Sa lem Industrial Development Council can provide business men in this trading area with such Department of Commerce services as they need and select from the wide range of census, country, commodity, and in dustrial material available from the Department. They can sc. cure facts about telling in new markets, both domestic and for eign, needed in analyzing ex. pension plant for an existing business enterprise and to at tract new industry to the area. This extended Commerce serv ice can play a most Important part in making effective pro gress on industrial and com. munity .development programs which create new job and pro. fit opportunities. Nearest U. S. Department of Commerce field office Is in Portland. The Portland Com merce Office will provide such assistance as b requested by the Salem Industrial Development Council in promptly serving manufacturers, wholesalers, re tailers, sendee trades, financial institutions, and trade publish- md associations, on such domestic rand foreign trade problems at come within the responsibilities of the Depart ment of Commerce. . Businessmen in the Salem trading area are invited to use these commerce facts in mak ing their business decisions. Miller said. This arrangement should provide an improved basis for business-government cooperation, he added. The Amin family is a family of acrobats, the father, four oth er brothers of the two playing here and six sisters are all acro bats. . 1 Mustafa, the older of the two brothers, started the act that he does at the State Fair with his father, Amin Akef, an acro bat and a trainer of acrobats. Then, however, he was "the man in the air." The brothers started work. log together 15 years ago. Mus tafa took the place that his fa ther had had in the act and Ab dou began doing the work in the air. The Amins started their training at seven years of age. Acrobatic acts of the Amin's family, go even further back than the father of the two per forming here. Their grandfa ther also was an acrobat Mus tafa and Abdou, however, are the only ones not still in Egypt. Prior to coming to the United States the Amins were in Italy, Spain and Paris and in the Orient They came to the Riv iera club in New York a year ago. Just before they came to the State Fair they were play ir.g at the Sahara hotel in Las Vegas, Nev. They have been Bids Received for The Dalles Turbines Portland V-A low bid of $626,475 was submitted Thurs day for two turbines at The Dalles Dam on the Columbia River. The bid was by the Al- lit Chalmers Manufacturing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. S. W. Grosebeck, Eugene, at $18,700, was low of four bid ders for construction, of a drain age system and backfilling of tunnels at Lookout Point Dam. ACCIDENT CLAIM Albany Albert White hat started suit in circuit court here asking an order com pelling the state industrial ac cident commission to re-open hit claim for partial disability resulting from an injury sus tained while employed as a checker setter Feb, 7, 1852. White claims his shoulder was broken by a falling log or limb and he still lacks full use of his arm. He it seeking a ruling giving him a disability rating equal to 85 per cent of the lost of- the use of an arm. Abdou (left) and Mustafa (right) Amin, brothers doing a balancing at the Oregon State Fair Revue, come from a family of acrobats in Egypt with the six boys and tlx girls of the family and the father all tcrobate. DM ' CAR ft TRUCK RENTALS 394 North Church Phone 3-9600 PSORIASIS eUaeovery, medicines, icr predates. reuex rrem aw wlthoat dram. ointments or oilier brum eemnleta Fseriasis. A tatted heme treatment is now avallahla. Without obligation write for free lnfonnntlan la H. a. Craig, 429 MaeArthar niTd Oakland f , California. HUNT FOODS INC FRONT and DIVISION ST. MEN & WOMEN WANTED To register now for prune canning. Thirty day season to start about Sept. 14. there twice and will be return ing there before long. . - Television audiences ' have also teen the -Amins, in fact they are at the State Fair be cause Helene Hughes saw them on the Ed Sullivan show on which they appeared three times. The two also were on the Abbott and Costello show. If Mustafa has hit wty there will be another generation of aero Data in his family for he has plans for making an acrobat of his small son, who with Mus tafa's wife is here in Salem with him. The littlest Amin was born in New York. ' m MS mtj. sett? IT0PS III QUALITY) Winter's Coming . . Better SEE RADIANT GLASSHEAT 1540 Fairgrounds Rd. Phono 44263 I ixaaoaof- I n V- M M. 4-U2J If I . I Mjjjk PLYWOOD SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! Buy Direct From the Manufacturer at Cash and Carry Wholesale Prices Special Prices to Builders Willamette Builders Supply Co. CHINA CITY SALEM'S NEWEST RESTAURANT" Extends a hearty "Thank You" to toch ond everyone of the patrons who dined with us during our Grand Opening, and hope for your oorly return. An equally sincere 'Thank You" to tha various vidualt flowers. business $Bm lndi p-ii firms, who so graciously sent f ys I y RESTAURANT If 8 W.mmm ' , hwaa17r. Effective Sept. 11-12-1 3 Friday, Saturday, Sunday SUGARS Si: BE' TOMATO JUICE S Da; . . !!S 4-oi. CANS CATSUPS W Tomato Soup wi 2 23' BLEACH CLOROX WHITE MAGIC Gal. CALF BUYS Shoulder Roast Tender Steaks For Pol 3E' EE) (Mil lb. 25J Sirloin lb. PRODUCE BUYS BANANAS , FOR LUNCHES lbs. SWEET CORN FRESH EARS D,, MtUSUB WATERMELONS KLONDIKE BLACK SEEDED Each Melon only 2120 F.irareurW. RJ. 24S Court Sr. . 93S S. Commercial 1265 Center St. AirmrWIle, Ore. Fhone 304