Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 25, 1954, Page 9, Image 9

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    Monday. January 25, 1954
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon
Page 9 ;
On Foot Tests
The Parent Teacher
tion of -St. Joseph School held
their regular monthly meeting
Wednesday evening at the
school hall and the health com
mittee gave a report of the re
sult ol the recent examination
o: tne pupils feet of St. Joseph
School conducted by Ray W.
Schiess, chiropodist. The need
for blood to perfect the globu
lin needed so badly for the fight
against polio was stressed and
asked for.
James Bishop presented
group ' of boys and girls who
merited awards for their
achievements in 4-H work, Chet
Loe of the First National Bank
making the presentations.
John 'Hamstreet received a
belt buckle from the Sears
Foundation for Red Award in
Sears gardun contest.
Mary Ann Meyer and Susan
Hamstreet were awarded checks
for $10 each from Safeway
Stores for Blue award in cook
ing demonstration on county
level by Carlos Lagerfeldt.
Gerald Pavlick received the
thife-year pin for cookery and
rabbits, and Kenneth Pavlick re
ceived the one-year pin for
cookery and rabbits, projects.
Mrs. Frank Hamstreet, who is
the leader of this 4-H group,
was highly complimented for
her efforts.
Father Joseph Vandcrbcck,
Vastor of St. Joseph Church
urged more frequent commu
nions for children.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Hunt of Port
land were the main speakers of
the evening. Their topic, "The
Christian Family Movement."
Polk County
Farm
Program
Jan. 29 Self feeding silo
tour, Oregon State college. Meet
9:30 a.m., county courthouse,
Dallas.
Jan. 29 Oregon essential oil
growers, Oregon State college.
Feb. 6 Oregon swine grow
ers bred gilt sale, state fair
grounds, Salem. Radio program
over KOAC every Tuesday at
12:15 p.m.
Ruptured Men
Get $3.50 Gift
for Trying This
Kansas City, Mo. Here is an
Improved means of ' holding
rupture that has benefitted
thousands of ruptured men and
women in the last year.
Inconspicuous, - without leg
straps, elastic belts, body en
circling springs or harsh pads,
it has caused many to say, "I
don't see how It holds so easy.
I would not have believed, had
I not tried it."
You can't lose by trying. It
is sent to you on 30 days trial.
Ycu receive a S3. 50 special
truss as a present for your re
port. Write for descriptive circu
lar. It's free. Just address
Phvslcian's Appliance Com
pany, 2241 Koch Bid., 2906
Main, Kansas City 8, Missouri.
Simulated Engraved
BUSINESS .CARDS
500 per 1,000
WAUY'S PRINT SHOP
Masonic Bldg. Dial 3-8853
TERMITES
FREE INSPECTIONS
Guaranteed Pest
Control Service
265 So. 20th Ph. 2-07S1
TRICKLING
roisy
TOIIET
9
AMERICA'S LARGEST SEUIN6
TOILET TANK BALL
Noity running fatten can wattt evr
500 Qollom ol woler a doy. The
emoting poltnleW Wol Motler
lank boll inilO"tly llopi th
flow of wottr oiler eocti rWtmg.
75c al hordwort itorei EVERYWHERE
JUL
C n 17 7
On
Salem Chiropractic
Clinic
m
PHYSIOTHERAPHY
ELECTROTHERAPHY
COLON IRRIGATION
X-RAY .
IV
Dr. i. L. Ahlbin
Nerve and Bone
Specialist
' Because their mothers all work, these children of the Holy
Family Nursery Home in San Francisco, never get the oppor
tunity to travel to the snow covered mountains. So John Mbr
tizia of Squaw Valley near Lake Tahoe 206 miles away filled
his truck with snow and brought it to the youngsters. The kids,
who never saw snow before, didn't have to be told what to do
with it The snowballs were soon flying (UP Telephoto)
Attorneys Named to
Defend Cpl. Dickenson
WASHINGTON tfl -Cpl. Ld
ward S. Dickenson, the former
prisoner of war who changed his
nin(i about remaining with the
Communists and then was charged
with unlawfully dealing with the
enemy, is described by one of his
attorneys as "quite a sick man."
Lt. Col. Edward W. Hendrick
said Sunday night the 23-year-old
soldier from Crackers Neck, Va.,
is "obviously run down and ner
vous and was very much sur
prised and shocked when these
charges were read to him Friday
night." -
Hendrick, a member of the mil
itary district of Washington judge
advocate general staff, and Capt.
Wilton B Persons Jr., son of Maj.
Gen. Persons, President Eisen
hower's assistant in charge of con
gressional liaison, were named by
the Army to represent Dickenson.
An inquiry will determine whether
the returned POW must face court
martian trial.
The case meanwhile continued
to have repercussions both inside
and out of the Defense Depart
ment. Col. Norman F. Sprowl, public
information officer for the Wash
ington Command who announced
the filing of the charges Friday
Welcome Given
RedPOWs
TAIPEH, Formosa (P) Five
shiploads of onetime soldiers in
Red China's Korean armies ar
rived Monday to a tumultuous
welcome from their chosen new
homeland, Nationalist China.
Flag-waving, shouting crowds
lined Taipeh's streets as creeping
trucks bore the 4,625 former war
prisoners from the nearby port of
Keelung where they landed from
Korea.
Five more shiploards are ex
pected Tuesday and five Wednes
day, bringing the last of the 14.000
anti-Red Chinese who were re
leased as civilians Satutday by
the U.N. Command.
Many had spent years in cap
tivity. All had spent half a year
under Indian control in the Korean
neutral zone where they were giv
er, their choice between mortal
enemies Red China and National
ist China.
Living coral can exist only at
shallow depths in the sea.
DEBBY
Wuhable O'lon
Nylon Wool and
and
Nylon
LITTLE FRENCH SHOP
iif mor
aRlrP - PlPrP'
NO PRESCRIPTION NEEDED
SAFE, Non-habit forming
No Bromides No oorblturatei
No Narcotlcf
ONLY 1. SO for bottle of 30 tablets
WILES DRUG STORE
COURT t HIGH STL PH. 3 8792
Vita)
Organs
Are
Controlled
Through
Nerves
Phono 2-6820 For Appotntmont
Hours 9 6 Dally Sal. A. M. Only
1225 S. Commercial
SNOWS COME TO THEM
0J
night, said he had received three
threatening telephone calls and
had been given permission to car
ry his service pistol at all times.
Sprowl said one man who called
from somewhere in West Virginia
early Sunday - "said he didn't like
the way we were handling the
case asked if we hadn't agreed
to give "these guys liberty."
"The general idea was 'we'll get
you for this,'" Sprowl added.
Asst. Secretary of Defense John
A. Hannah said Sunday night the
Defense Department has planned
for some time to take action
against returned war prisoners
when their actions justified it.'
The charges against Dickcrson,
which are still subject to further
investigation by the Army, arc
that he had unlawful dealings with
ihe Communist enemy and curried
favor with his captors to the dc
riment of fellow prisoners.
East Salem
EAST SALEM A meeting of
interest to all parents living in
Auburn school community was
held at the school house Thurs
day night. It was the regular
January meeting of the Auburn
Parents club and the guest
speaker was Gus Moore, repre
sentative ol tne Salem school
board.
He had the tentative plans for
the new Auburn school building.
The plans were discussed with
Moore and the building com
mittee representatives of the
community were invited to at
tencd the meeting or the board.
The Parents club has one spe
cial donation which is for a
built in kiln for the children's
work in cerematics. Mrs. George
Maske will act as chairman of
the representatives that attend.
Mrs. Jonathan Graber report
ed on what can be done at this
time to open a new road from
Center to Auburn streets.
The parents club will help
with the mothers polio drive
with Mrs. Enoch Mcrrell the
lieutenant, assisted by Mrs. Don
ald Griswold, Mrs. Connie
Schocker and Mrs. Quientus
Walker.
The Parents club made a con
tribution for the drive. Hostesses
for the social hour were Mrs.
Donald Jacobe, Mrs. Wesley Car
ter, Mrs. C. C. Durkce, Mrs. Vir
gil Mahaffey, Mrs. Lloyd Mass
and Mrs. Sam Saunders.
A guest at the Lor an Rirhcy
home nn Monroe Ave. is Mrs.
Lillian Kirk of Rhinclander, Wis.
The Merry-Go-Round club met
Thursday night with Mrs. Clay
ton Gibb on Hollywood Dr. At
tending were Mrs. W. J. Buck,
Mrs. Keith LaDue, Mrs. Harold
Holler, Mrs. Sam Rehfeld, Mrs.
Melvin LaDue, Mrs. David Karn,
Mrs. Lloyd Laudie. Game prizes
were given Mrs. Laudie and Mrs.
Karn and the door prize to Mrs.
Melvin LaDue.
Mrs. Ralph Wein and Mrs. Clif
ford Yost were hostesses for a
six o'clock dinner at the former's
home on Lancaster Dr., Thurs
day evening. Guests were oast
presidents of the Swcglc Wom
ans club.
Covers were placed for Mrs.
Clark McCall, Mrs. C. A. Salter,
Mrs. E. E. Brand, Mrs. Charles
Bnttorff, Mrs. Helen Enloc, Mrs.
Walter Irby of Albany: Mrs.
Marion West, Mrs. Elsie Norton,
Mrs. William Hartley and the
hostesses.
Week end guests at the
Charles Bottorff home on Sun
nyview Ave. were her brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
C. E. Beall of Dcs Moines, Iowa.
l I. i. ia. ft D Oi U Chin H D
DRH. HAN and I.AM
CHINESE NAT I'ROPATHi
l'fUir VMl Nnrth Uhrrt)
Offlrt opn Btturdty oniy It in
t ' Im . I t 1 tn roni alt Mim
fiiooo orrwurr and mint tnt ar
t ot rhfrtt Prartlr'd inr tl
Wf1t f ttrirflt nn tin At) It
W J-f ...... (v
1 As
tjb$i TV!
MISS
Below Zero
In Midwest
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Montana, port of entry and
reservoir of the nation s cold
weather for nearly two weeks,
Monday had sub-zero temperatures
for the 12th consecutive day.
While -, scattered snow accom
panied readings ranging down to
Great Falls' 26 below and Lewis
ton's and Cutbank's 23 below, a
full scale snowstorm struck to the
south, in Utah.
The snowfall continued after de
positing as much as 16 inches at
Randolph near the Wyoming line in
Northwest Utah, closing, two ma
jor highways and making others
dangerous to use, and posing the
menace of snowslides. Earlier the
storm left lesser amounts of snow
through Southern Idaho and North
ern Nevada.
The zero temperaturearea in
cluded the Dakotas and Minnesota
early Monday. Freezing tempera
tures were prevalent as far south
as Southern Oklahoma.
There was drizzle in the Ohio
Valley, the Eastern Great Lakes
region, and rain in Southern Cal
ifornia. THE PIKE
- Maplenut
ICE CREAM
138 S. LIBERTY
At first we thought we could
But then we discovered that
over the years it costs about
c'mon .. .we've loads of room!
and mean it! And what a difference it makes to have those optional power features,
A 4-way power seat, power steering, power brakes -and that wonderful
no-shift Merc-O-Matic Drive! With i new 161 h.p. engine and ball-joint front
suspension for complete driving easel
MERCURY . THE CAR THE WEST LIKES BEST
America's only completely
WARNER MOTOR Co.
430 N. Commercial i
Solem, Ore.
Four Childrep
Die in Fire
JUNEAU, . Alaska t Four
small children died in a fire which
destroyed the George Hanna home
north of here Sunday.
Firemen said the blaze, starting'
from an exploding kitchen oil
stove, spread quickly through the
house, trapping three of the child
ren on the second floor.
Hanna carried the youngest
child, one-month-old Harley, from
the parents' first floor bedroom,
but found the Infant was dead of
suffocation.
Others lost were Henry, 4; Har
ry 3, and Holly, 18 months.
Hanna is a nephew of Secretary
of Alaska W. E. Hendrickson.
Jack Millar
Here Tuesday
J. R. (Jack) Millar, former
president and now chairman of
the board of directors of Na
tional Automotive Fibres of De
troit, will make his Annual visit
to Salem Tuesday.
Millar is coming here for an
Inspection of the affiliated Sa
lem plant, Oregon Flax Tex
tiles. Ordinarily Millar lands in
Salem by private plane with a
large party of friends and fel
low officials of the company.
But this time he lands in Port
land and will be met in Port
land and driven to Salem by
Clyde Everett, manager of the
Salem plant
Salem friends will give a
luncheon for Millar Tuesday at
the Randall Catering Service,
1525 Mill Street.
AEC MANAGER RESIGNS
WASHINGTON I Walter J.
Williams resigned Sunday as dep
uty general manager for the Atom
ic Energy Commission. Williams
said he will become vice president
of the Tacomte Contracting Corp.
a subsidiary of the Erie Mining
Among birds of prey, the fe
male often is larger than the
male.
POOR BOY
SANDWICH
AT
NORTH'S
1170 Contor
afford onty i small, "low price" ear.
Mercury's re-sale value stays so high, that
the same as a small car. So today we say '
powered car in the popular
Liberty
Salem Heights
LIBERTY-SALEM HEIGHTS -
The Liberty Salem Heights home
extension Unit held its meeting at
tne home of Mrs. Lyle Bayne on
E. Madronna Ave.
Mrs. Harvey Willard presided at
the meeting and the furniture re
finishing work shop was discussed
and dates were set. They are Feb.
2. I, 12, and 26. It will be held at
the Salem Heights community hall.
The February meeting will be mak
ing fabric lampshades. Mrs. Aaron
Schalk and Mrs. Harold Rose
braugh will be the project leaders.
They may be consulted for . de
tails. .
Mrs. Orville Raymond was the
project leader and she presented
simple home repairs.
The South Salem Suburban Cham
ber of Commerce held its month
ly meeting Wednesday evening at
the China City Restaurant.
Myron Butler presided at the
meeting and the group decided that
the Boy Scout Troop 19, which they
sponsor, would use Joryville Park
in the conservation program. They
plan to plant trees and build a
bridge across the stream. Frank
Meeker was named as the instilu.
tional representative for the club
to the Scout troop.
Money raising protects were dis
cussed and a committee was ap
pointed to study ways and means.
Appointed were Rollo Wilson. Ho-
ward (fardner, Walter Barkus, El
bert Dickson and Robert Friess,
The Boy Scout troop plans to
entertain the club in March.
LIBERTY -TThe Flying Ar
row patrol of Boy Scout troop
18, celebrated Jerry Seeger's 14
birthday at a party Wednesday
evening at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Roland Seeger on Seeger
Lane.
The evening was spent sled
ding. Honoring Jerry were Da
vid Mischke, Larry Woltte, Keith
Mischke, Marvin Peters, Dennis
Prompt Repair
Service
' Electric Ranges
' Automatic Water Heaters
' BencSix laundry Equip.
290 N. Commercial Ph. 14141
price field
JMPL UMBING -HE A TING
Fugitive Now
On FBI List
WASHINGTON HI - The FBI
Monday added to its list of 10 most
wanted men the name of 30-year-old
Everett Lowell Krueger, alias
Ed King, whose criminal exploits
have plagued police in a half doz
en Western states since he was
14 years old.
Krueger has served time for var
ious offenses in state and federal
institutions in Wyoming, Colorado,
Nebraska, California ana Okla
homa. He became a federal fugitive
wnen ne allegedly crossed state
lines to evade capture after lead
ing a three-man break from the
Jackson, Wyo.. jail in May 1953.
Krueger went on the "most
wanted" list as a replacement for
inesier Davenport, Oklahoma
cattle rustler and robber, who was
picked up at Dixon, Calif., Jan. 7.
Silverfon Youth
Wins Honor at OCE
Oregon Collese-Monmouth
Eight students from Oregon Col
lege of Education were recently
named to Who's Who Among Stu
dents in American Universities
and Colleges. This is an honor
given only to juniors and seniors
at four-year accredited colleges
Woitte and Robert and Steven
Seeger.
Barbecued
CRAB
AT
NORTH'S
1170 Contor
BETTER SIGHT
It comes from proper care and regular examinations.
Come In nowl
USE YOUR CREDIT
AND OUR' EASY
PAYMENT PLAN
" II
Optometrists
At Boring Optteal
Corner 11th at Center
Dial S-I5H
hoe Parking Spate
Dr. K.
K. Bortaf
and universities throughout the
U.S. . - V .
OCE students who received the
award for ' 1953-54 were Lucille
Goyak Bcaverton; Mary Ann
Hudson, Clatskame; Ray Mey
ers, Silverton: Wanda Nelson,
Monmouth; John Pizzuti, DeLake;
Bradley Rislove, Milwaukie; Gale
Taylor, Toledo; and Fern Wal
lace, Tangent. They were chosen
hv a committee composed of OCE
Faculty members.
4 H OFFICERS TRAINING
DALLAS The 4-H officer's,.
training school was postponed,
due to uncertain weather for
county-wide attendance, reports
John Grimes, assistant county
extension 'agent. The new date
has been set for Feb. 2 at the
Rickreall grade school, 7:30 to
9:30 p.m.
LEON'S
2 for 1
Shoe Sale
Now in
Progress
Buy the first pair at regu
lar price - get the second
pair FREE!
Do You Know?
The physically handicapped
need your help. Goodwill In
dustries needs your discarded
clothing, furniture and house
hold articles to keep the hand
icapped employed.
Tolophono 4-2241
for Tuesday pickups in West
Salem it South of Center St.:
Fridays: North of Center St.
Dr. Baas Hat has
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