Fk 13 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Salem. Qrtra Tuesday. December 8. 1953 ELECTRIC CONDUITS COLLAPSED AND STARTED SCHOOL FIRE -"Uil Iff? .a: limP t ' yip 1 ; a Milk Case Postponed Oregon City ) A circuit court bearing in the cm of Elmer DeeU, Canby dairyman accused of illegal milk salei, wai postponed Monday. Deetz had been ordered to how why he shouldn't be topped from celling raw milk directly to consumers. The State Board of Agriculture contended this wss a violation of the state milk control laws tributor'i license. Deets attorney, Glenn R. Jack of Oregon City, with drew from the case at the last minute. Jack said that as at torney for the Orgon Indepen dent Milk Producers Associa tion, he could not get involv ed in a case which directly challenged the milk control law. Circuit Judge P. K. Ham mond poitponed the case until December 21 to give Deetz time to find another lawyer. Harpooned a p e r m whales are highly dangerous. One charged and sank the Ameri- because he did not have a dis- csn bark Kathleen in 1902. Father finds Son in Car Dead Lexington. Ky. W-George Rengro. who came here yes terday hunting a son he hadn't n torn wks. fOlffid him in the trunk of an auto, shot to death. The victim wss William Delmer Renfro. 28-year-old unemployed Madison county farmer. Police ssid after the hk n Rrnfra'a head wai torn away by a shotgun blast, tne ooay was siuuea in uie victim's own car. The elder Renfro made the discovery after visiting w grocery to check on the son's , whereabouts. When he came "j out of the store, he noticed the auto parked on the street. j Police said an acquaintance - of Renfro' son had tipped the father to the car's where- 2 bouts. 3 The murder hsd police baf- fled tuliy. "We're working - on this case without any clues." commented LL Stan- i i ' -H ley Hadley. Bermuda Is named for its Spanish discoverer, Jusn de Bermudez. teieri-lreofcing, Ecmmv-WKmIiii Res! Rom V-l Newest, Smoothest, Most Powerful Aelomotic Tronsmlssiosi IP wee Fruit Growers Talk Markets Wenatchee, Wash. W) Apple marketing and merchandising problems Tuesday occupied the attention of more than 1,200 fruit growers and fruit industry representatives in the second day of the three-day Washing ton State Horticultural Assn. meeting here. Monday the delegates consid ered fruit diseases and insect pest, dealing for the most part with the coddling moth and ap ple scab. Dr. Rod Sprague of the Washington State College Tree Fruit Experiment Station here, said apple growers in the Oka nogan County area are becom ing bothered more and more by apple scab. Growers in the infected area were advised by Dr. Sprague to spray early with recom mended fungicides. ' These conduits for electric wiring, temporarily at tached to the overhead structure, collapsed and started a short but spectacular fire at the new South Salem high school building. Damage was about $1500. Short Spectacular Fire At South Salem High A brilliant eiectrlcal display in the new South Salem High School startled residents in the area late Monday night as a se ries of large electrical conduits pulled loose from their sup ports and crashed to the floor, shorting out the wires. Apparently something gave IN RUNNING "-mm t. L. Rogers, county com missioner, who has an nounced his candidacy for re-election. E. L. Rogers To Run Again County Commissioner E. L. Rogers, resident of Oregon for 45 years, announced Tuesday that he would seek re-election in 1954. Commissioner Rogers joined the county court in May 1946 when he was sworn in by County Judge Grant Murphy. He succeeded Commissioner Jim Smith who died a few days preceding the 1946 primaries. Rogers was a candidate for the office and was unopposed Rogers was re-elected in 1951, so he will be seeking his third term next year. County work was not new to Rogers when he became a com missioner in his own right. He served as foreman in connec tion with road and bridge work and during the last year of Commissioner Smith's term sc companied him on his tours over the county. Rogers and his fellow mem bers of the county court. Judge Rex Hartley and Commissioner Roy Rice are responsible for the handling of county business which operates on a budget slightly under three million dollars. Rogers lives in the Quinsby district where he served as Oregon Electric company agent for about four years. He and his wife have four children, all living in Oregon. The commis sioner Is member of the Sa lem Lions club, BPO Elks and IOOF. i South Salem Rejects Bonds South Salem A $30,000 bond Issue for a new fire hall and equipment was defeated Monday at the regular election of the Liberty-Salem Heights fire district. The bond issue lost by a vote of 122 against and 79 for the issue. Two hundred and five votes were cast, making this the largest regular fire district election since the beginning of the district The fire code was approved by the voters with vote of 131 to 70, and the annexations carried by 133 to 43. This area is lust south of the present boundary and roughly between Sunnyside road and IT. S. 99E. Five directors elected to the board were Walter Schendel, Donald K. Griffith, Louis E. Kurth, Theodore Thompson and Lyle Sultter. Judges serving were Mrs. Ernest Free, Mrs. Nina Brown ing and Mrs. Louis Kurth. Other elections held in the South Salem area on Monday were Vista Heights water dis trict and Salem Heights water district. In the Vista Heights water district, two directors were el ectedLawrence Rich and William Troth with 31 votes cast. Serving on the election board were Mrs. John Douglas, Mrs. Myra Taylor and Mrs. L. L. Bennett. In the Salem Heights water district, Elbert Dickson was el ected director over two who appeared on the ballot and three write-ins. He will fill the office of treasurer. One hun dred eighty-four votes were cast. Approved by a large margin of vote were the annexations, one in the South Village area and the east and west Brown- ! ing Ave. area. Judges were I Mrs. O. B. Gorton, Mrs. Hale Mickey and Mrs R. R. Ritchie. way in one area of the long hall way and the heavy conduits along the ceiling snapped sup ports one after another for a distance of about 150 feet down the north-south corridor of the school. Near the juncture where the supports held, the bending pipe short-circuited the wiring and the current burned through the heavy conduit pipe for several feet. City firemen rushed to the scene but found there was no fire. The electrical breaker sys tem had cut off the current and the flashing electrical display. There was little else there to burn, firemen said. Voltage in the wires was the standard household voltage of 120, Portland General Electric men said, but the large capa city of the lines and electrical system allowed increased cur rent to flow Into the lines until the shorting was sufficient to actuate the breaker system. A tentative estimate of the damage was placed at $4,000 to $5,000 Tuesday by City Engi neer Harold Davis. He said his office would investigate the in cident in an attempt to find the cause of the failure. There were six of the S'.i Inch conduits that fell and one smaller one, firemen said. Also damaged was a large switch- box in the basement from which the lines fed. New Minister At Silver! on Silverton The Rev. Paul W. Henry appeared before a record attendance group of parishioners welcoming their new pastor in his first sermon Sunday morning at the First Methodist church. His sermon topic was: "Days of prepara tion. Rev. Henry succeeds the Rev. Douglas Harrell who left dur ing the past week for his south ern California assignment. Rev. Henry comes to Silver- ton from a pastorate at the Portland Woodlawn church. He received his early educa tion in the elementary and high schools of South Dakota, his native state. Rev. Henry received his B.A. degree from Western Maryland college, Westminster, Md., and his B.D. degree from Drew university, Madison. N. J. While at Drew, he served as pastor at the Grace Method ist church in Newark, and a circuit of four churches near Baltimore, Md., during the six years previous to accepting the pastorate of Woodlawn in Port land, two years ago. Mrs. Henry was born in West Virginia, grew to womanhood in Baltimore, was an instruc tor of Latin and French before her marriage, and is a talented vocalist. The two daughters of the Henrys are Paula, 6, and Chris tie, 2. Low Prices Irk Spud Growers Prlneville ( Central Ore gon potato growers met with the roweil Buiie club Monday night to talk over the low re turn they are getting for pota toes. They came up with no so lution. However, Roy Snabel, chair man of the Oregon-California Potato Marketing Agreement Committee, gave them a sug gestlon: He proposed that stan dards be raised, with 6 ounce substituted for 4 ounce as the standard minimum. There was no agreement among the 75 growers present that this would be the best so lution. However Snabel is ex- pected to advance it again at a meeting of the marketing com mittee at Klamath Falls late Tuesday. Growers said carlots were HARD OF HEARING NOTICE Dec. 10 - 10 to 6 p.m. -Salem Senator Hotel See Mr. Sorenten SPECIAL HEARING CONSULTATION by ACOUSTICON, the World's Oldest Maker of Electric Hearing Aids To Be a Monthly Service ASK ABOUT OUR $50.00 TRADE-IN and 10-DAY MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE! 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