pm is THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SaWOntw POLK COUNTY'S OLDEST SCHOOLHOUSE? L - f Everett Shibley Cattleman of Year At a banquet given In his honor by the Oregon Cattle men'! Anociatlon, Everett Shibley of Clackamai County was presented with the Her man Oliver Tropny for his out atandlnf contribution to the cattle Industry in the state of Oregon. The Shibley story Is typical of pioneer western America and proves that success is still within the grasp of the ener getic and ambitious. The story began In 1872 when Shlbley's grandfather settled in Oregon after having crossed the plains Salem Daily Record for April 8, 1868, mentions that Fairview school on a hillside in Polk county about a mile ' above the ferry landing (J. N. Matheny's steam ferry launched November 23, 1867) had opened. Tuition was 12 50 or $3 a quarter and Mrs. Chapman had been en gaged as teacher for the first six months. Thirty years later. In 1880, Hedda Swart, Marion county engineer, attended school there. In recent years this old school house on Moores Way In West Salem has belonged to Mrs. Sally Damrell. It is now unoccupied. by covered wagon. It took three generations of hard work to develop the ranch on Clear Creek from a wilderness to a now ..rosperous stick farm. Four other Oregon cattlemen were honored ss district win ners. J. n. Breese, Prlneville Herbert Chandler, Baker; Hen ry Gerber, Klamath Falls and Gerry Xlose, Grants Pass were cited for their accomplish ments during the past year. fit VANISHES SOCK BEMAINS " Seattle John E. Trim mer reported to police that be fore retiring he put $40 In his sock, bolted the door of his apartment from the inside, put the sock on his foot, climbed into bed and went to sleep. When ha woke up in the morning he reported, the $40 was gone but the sock still was on his foot Off OfilB (&x2&mmB Which cor ho cmci dl 48 state ot on operating cost at kw as this? LESS THAN ONE CENT A MILE I ABO WILLYS of cowricl . EISNER MOTOR CO., 352 N. High Special Meeting of Zoning Board Called Variance procedure under the new zoning code will be discussed at a epecial meeting of the Salem Planning and Zoning Commission Friday nignt at 7:30. Chairman W. W. Rosebraugh says that the commission will hava more responsibility for variances under the new code and he wants the members of the commission to talk about the subject in private before the regular meetings of the month. Under the newly-adopted code the commission is said to have authority to allow excep tions to the code. By the old code this authority was entire ly with the City Council. McMinnville Gets Lampshade Plant McMinnville W A Seattle firm plans to set up a factory here in the next two months to make lamp shades of wood veneer and plastic. Beau Veneer, Inc., said a dozen men would be employed in making the shade of a thin veneer sandwiched between thin layers of plastic .The shades will go to a Se attle company, which makes the rest of the lamp. The other Seattle firm may move here later. Beau Veneer said. New York's People Lost Without Their Papers BY MARTIN POST New York ( When New Yorkers asked "What's new?" this week the weren't just just making conversation. They hadn't seen a single one of their mijor newspapers since Mondsy. They were an noyed and news-hungry, and advertising-hungry, too. Shoppers stayed home in HD'S i&ARKET IW0 I. lit. It. Store Hour 7 to 1 1 Phone 2-6403 PRICES EFFECTIVE FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY FRESH KILLED TURKEYS LB. 3ge Svittning 31 65 Powdered cr Brown Sugar 2 n. 15c Limit 4 to o Fomily AA GRADE LARGE Eggs Farm Fresh . Doz. 59 SWIFTS Peanut Butler . 5-lb. Pail $J49 Slightly Dented MEAT PRODUCE Fresh Pork Roast JE u s No-1 COTTAGE ROLLS . . lb. Till POTATOES 77" 10 ibi. 39c ROAST ..23c fA,T STEAKS Ik, T kM, SVMt 11 35tl 3 -,25c " -" - CFLERY COLORED FRYERS a 49c ,5. SLICED BACON 39c Sw limit 2 U Family Lb. 5C Dean Reese Speaks Monday 'What If Another Pearl Har. bor?" will be the subject of an address before the Chamber of Commerce forum luncheon Monday noon at the Marion Hotel. The speaker will be Seward P. Reese, dean of the College of Law at Willamette Univer sity. Dean Reese is a colonel in the Air Force Reserve. In World Wsr II Colonel Reese served on General Hap" Arnold's Air Force staff as executive officer of a heavy bomb group and also as execu tive officer of one of the larg est pre-flight schools. Sues Over Smoke Albany Smoke, soot cinders and burning sawdust from forced draft burners operated by the Santiam Lumber Co. at Sweet Home, have caused dam age to his property in the amount of $10,000, M. A. Puck ett alleges in a complaint here in circuit court. Puckett asks a Judgment in that amount asserting that he built and completed a residence near the mill in April, 1947, and that the burners were in stalled after Jan. 1, 1949. droves when they should have been massing for the Christ mas buying rush. Job seekers and home-huAt-ers had. no want ads to guide them. There were no race re sults, no horoscopes. Financial houses took emer gency measures to keep their clients abreast of Wall street Many persons missed out on what waa happening to their comic strip heroes, although some comics were read over radio and television. iiaDits of a lifetime were disrupted. i iook at my wile every day now while wer'e eating." one man aaid mournfully. "There's no newspaper be tween us. Subway riders emerged from behind their newsprint curtain. They peered at ear ads, resd books and maga lines, or Just studied the faces and clothes of fellow passen gers. On the Queens subway rush hour they saw an attractive young woman peck at her escort's cheek without bene fit of a ahield. Suburban communters found new de iignu in the scenery, or caught up on aleep. One railroad issued a mim eographed summary ot the day's new to its riders. And a restaurant chain has been putting out 20,000 copies of a single page news sheet for its customers since Tues day. , News stands around the town reported a heavy run on weekly newa magazines, cross word puzzles and comic books. Ona vendor remarked that people are buying practically anything with reading matter. Hiss to Dray $715 Pension Washington Alger Hiss, former State Department offi cial serving a prison term for perjury, is entitled to a govern ment pension ot S71J a year when he becomes 62. Officials said today Hiss must be paid the annuity under terms of the Civil Service Re tirement law. That law, as It now stands, does not allow the government to withhold a pen sion from eligible former fed eral workers even if they are convicted ot treason. Hiss waa convicted of per jury for denying he slipped confidential State Department papers to Whlttaker Chambers, self-confessed courier for a Communist spy ring. We began serving his jail sentence March, 1951, and will be, freed next year with time off for good be Marion Co. Turkey Growers Winners McMinnville Ut-Final con tests were held Friday at the annual Pacific Coast Turkey Exhibit with the Cath Broth ers of Turner again in the fore front. Their entries won four titles Wednesday and added three more Thursday. The latest championships were tor dressed birds, including a bronze torn and a torn and hen other than bronze. The dressed bronze hen title went to the Lyons Triple B Turkey Farm ot Portland. Henry Holland, Silverton, had the top entries in the com mercial division for heavy and light toms and for light hens. The heavy hen division title went to Johnson Brothers, of Scappoose. j D. R. Cooper, Parkdale, won i JAYCEE HEAD 4 r I ' Sj 1 r Mltt tehswisisAJ'UMl Woodburn Gilbert (Gib) Ramage, newly elected pres ident of the Woodburn Junior Chamber of Commerce. first and second places for live adult bronze hens. Friday, Dtcembw 4. 1851 rv U-i umner neer i With Norblad Time and place for the meet, your-congressman dinner meet ing sponsored by the Chamber ot Commerce are Friday night. Dee. 18, at the Marion Hotel. Whether the meeting would be a luncheon or dinner meet- . lng had been a question, but the latter was decided oa as more convenient for persona 1 coming from a distance. , The meeting will be for bu siness and community leaders ot aU 10 counties ot the First Congressional District, and Pre- sident William H. Hammond 1 and Manager Clay Cochran ot the Salem chamber are send ing out the notices. Nationally similar meetinga are being sponsored by the United States Chamber of Commerce. Included among the subjects to be discussed with Rep. Wal ter Norblad will be taxes, spending of public money, ag riculture, labor, postal rates, social security, treaty law, foreign trade, housing, high ways, and government functions. Only about 20 of Bermuda's 300 islands are inhabited. - - BIRD SHOW PARAKEETS - CANARIES - FINCHES The All Voriety Bird Club of Salem end sur rounding communities is holding their Annual Bird Show and Bazaar at D. A. White & Sons, 265 State, on SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5th. Show hours 9:00 until 5:00. Prizes of Parakeets and Canaries are to be given away. Come in and win a bird. D. A. WHITE & SONS 265 State Phone 22478 Ihe cigarette itat takes theJMS out of smoldng t ? J M ... ... - 4k ,K i v u y. gar i rr nl- CAtL to Only one cigarette . . . 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