Page 8 SECTION I
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL; Salem, Oregon
Friday, May 21, 1954
a; : Boots and Spurs
By SUSAN YOUNGQUIST
A bit of tad newi to begin
this usually gay piece of writing.
Three of our members have been
confined to various hospitals in
the area. Jesse Jones is in the
Salem General hospital. Also ij
- Salem General is Bill Kergil
Hmmm . . . Wonder if these two
horse lovers are in the same
room! Al lnglis is home from the
Dallas hospital. He was confined
to this abode with a broken arm,
but at latest reports, he is im
proving rapidly.
Ralph Stangcby - and Glen
Conkkn went off to Pullman,
Wash., yesterday to participate
jn a Washington state judging
school. They will return to Salem
Sunday.
Much ado and bustle in prep
aration for our show this week
end. All classes are filling rapid
ly and it seems that the riders
throughout the state are taking
a great interest in our show. The
events will be varied. Saturday
night's show consists of Jump
ers, Western Pleasure Horse,
Calf Ropers, Three gaitcd class,
Stake Bending, Wild Cow Milk'
ins,. Possp Drill Exhibition. Pa
rade Horse, Junior Scat and
Hand, Shetland Pony Carts, Cow
Hide Race, Junior . Boys Calf
Scramble, and Rags and Bags
Race.
Sunday, the classes will Include
Jumpers. Jr. Horsemanship-
Western, Glag Relay, Calf Rop
ing, Palomino Class, Wild Cow
Milking, Shetland Pony Carts,
Posse Drill. Roadsters to Bike,
Calf Scramble, Texas Clover
Leaf. Cowhide Race, Rags and
Bags. So as you can sec, there is
quite a lot to look forward to,
and a Jot of entertainment. .
Saturday night, Multnomah
County sheriff's posse will drill,
while the exhibit Sunday is by
the Salem Saddle Club.
Miss Joyce Case
Is Wed Sunday
ALBANY In a simple ceremony
last Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Reese Doolcy, Miss Shir
ley Joyce Ann Case was wed to
Donald I. Behrends. She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. D.
Case of Albany and he is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Behrends of
the Talbot community.
The Rev. R. E. Book performed
the 3 o'clock doublering service,
and the bride was given in mar-
riage by her brother, Orlind Case.
For her wedding the bride wore a
dress of Chantilly lace over satin,
with a nylon tulle skirt The fin
gertip veil was fastened to a tiny
lace cap trimmed in rhinestones,
and the bride carried a large
white orchid atop a white Bible.
Miss Pat DoolCy was the bride's
only attendant, wearing an aqua
colored ballerina length . dress of
sheer nylon net. She carried a
largo nosegay of pink carnations
and white snapdragons.
The mother of the bridegroom
wore a dark blue print dress and
corsage of talisman roses. -
Gayle Gllmore attended the
bridegroom as best man and Mike
Dooley served as the candlelight
er. Mrs. Reese Dooley provided
Wedding music. Candelabrums
centered the setting in front of
the fireplace, and large baskets
of white, calla lilies and fern were
olaced on each side.
Fifty-five guests were greeted
at a reception following the cere
mony. Miss Arlcne Raymond was
In charge of the guest book and
Mrs, Beverly Smith1 presided at
the sift table. . Mrs. David Ray
itiond poured,, with Mrs. Arthur
Hall and Mrs.' Wayne Farlee as
sisting.
For a wedding trip by motor to
Mexico, Mrs.' .Behrends wore a
light blue faille dress, topped with
5 Clue coat ana wnite accessories,
er corsage was a white orchid.
. .'"
dent; Joan Deagen, vice-president;
Shirley Brown, secretary;
and Kathy Nonneman, reporter.
Hildegarde Sticka of the . jun
iorette troop, Tekakwitha,, pre
sented a U.S. flag and their
statue of the Child Jesus to the
junior chairman, Mrs. Smith, who
presented them to Mrs. Lawrence
Paradis, the incoming counselor
for the new juniorette troop. Mari
lyn Gamroth, also of the junior-
ettcs, gave a reading, a story of
the Child Jesus.
Juniorettes graduating to jun
iors and receiving green berets
were; Hildegarde Sticka, Mary
Nonneman. Katy Haener, Shar
on Donnelly. Marilyn Gamroth,
Lana Smith, Geraldine Fleck, and
Nancy Steffen.
The girls served refreshments
assisted by Mrs, 'Max Warring,
Mrs. L. Petshow, and -Mrs.. Joe
Uphoff. Frances Klenski, the out
going president, and ueorgeann
Pavlicek, the incoming president,
poured at the coffee and tea
tables. ..-
WOODBURN . . . Leaders day
at Camp Kilowan, Tuesday, May
18, was attended by Mrs. Jess
Fikan. Mrs. Lewis Paulson, Mrs.
Charles Byers, Mrs. Harry Van-
Arsdale, Mrs. Robert Hurst, Mrs.
Carl Leonhart, Mrs. Harold Buch
anan and Mrs. Arthur Burt. The
visitors cooked and served an out
door meal at noon and inspected
the camp with leaders from Cor
vallis, Albany,1 Dallas, Mill City,
Monmouth, Salem and Woodburn.
T
Brooks
GIANT MAPLE . FALLS TO PROGRESS
t - - - ' ... -?T
. J -'- ':':r:r ..'VI
tit? 4
Iff fV'iSrL.
t . :
Educators Pay Tribute
To Harry B. Johnson
Photo shows huge maple tree at southwest corner of Church
and Chemeketa Streets falling to ground as it yields to tug
of-a winch after workmen had cut its roqts. Trees are being
removed to clear site, where St. Paul's Episcopal church once
stood, for a parking lot . ; .
No Injury Followed
400,000 Inoculations
Junior CDA Court
Entertain Mothers
WOODBURN - The Junior
Catholic Daughters of Court Vic
tory staged their honor court and
mothers tea in St. Luke's hall,
Sunday. The room and tea tables
were decorated with arrange
ments of spring flowers. Corsages
made by the girls of the troops
were presented to the visitors.
The affair was opened by reci
tation of their act of consecration
to the sacred heart, followed by
the program consisting of num
bers by the different troops of
juniors. St. Rose of Lima troop
presented a sketch showing the
Blessed Virgin as a model in vo
cations. Shirley Brown of St.
Mane uorctti troop played a
piano solo, and St. Veronica troop
gave two sketches in which the
audience participated.
Guests were Father Michael
Fleming, Mrs. Alvah Cowan,
grand regent of Court Victory No,
7.11, members of Ihe senior court,
and mothers of Ihe junior mem
bers. Special guests were, Mrs.
Napoleon Rocquc, Salem court
junior chairman, and Mrs. Mar
garet Brown, slate junior chair
man. Father Fleming gave a
talk as did Mrs. Cowan. Alter
her speech, Mrs. Brown present
ed pins to the following juniors:
five year to, Betty , Reis; four
year to Kathy Nonneman. Mar
lenc Andrews, Frances Klenski,
and GeorReann Pavlicek : three
year to Frances Scrres, Joan
Dcaficn, Beverly Deguirc, and
Janet Melmer; two year to Carol
Klenski, Marie Louise Haener,
Connie Vandchcy, and Carol
Heidt: one year to Shirley
Brown, Claudia Sticka. Yvonne
Smith, Joann Wcigel, Janet Car
ter, Mary Donnelly, Barbara
Wcngcnwrolh, and Margaret Pet
Show. The new officers were introduc
ed. Gcorgcannc Pavlicek is prcsi-
BROOKS Graduation exercises
will be held at Brooks, May' 26
at 8-p.m. Miriam watson is the
valedictorian; Juanita Hawley, sh-
lutatorian. The annual school pic
nic will be held at the school,
May 27.
The Scout Troop and Cub pack
57 are now being sponsored by
the dads of the Scouts. An or
ganization meeting was held at
the home of Marshall Christofer-
son. The Scoutmaster is Leo
Hawley, assisted by Ted Lowery.
The explorer leader is Elmer
McClaughry. The Cub master is
Robert Pirtlc, assisted by Alfred
Blogg. Institutional representa
tive is Honty Chnstoferson. The
remaining fathers arc the com
mitteemen. A permanent meet
ing place is still to be announced.
Open house at the Brooks
school was well attended.
The business meeting of the
Brooks PTA followed open house.
Highlight of the meeting was the
installation of the new officers.
Corsages were presented to the
new group. New officers were
installed by Mrs. Henry Harris.
They were Mrs. Jack Scorgic,
president; Orlo Palmer, vice pres
ident; Mrs. Raymond Potts, secre
tary; Mrs. T. Yada, treasurer.
The room count trophy was pre
sented to the outgoing president.
Mrs. Howard Carter.
Mr. Archer's 7th and 8th
grade classes won the room count.
It was voted to present the
ntw president with a gavel. A
gift was presented to Mrs. Wal
ler Brutka for her leadership of
the upper grade girls in tumbling.
CHICAGO IM Not a single case
of serious reaction or death has
been reported from, among more
than 400,000 of the nation's school
children given, inoculations,. of the
Salk polio vaccine. ' :
Dr. Robert F. Korns, a member
of the national polio vaccine eval
uation team, made the first official
report on the mass experiment
yesterday to the annual convention
of the Illinois State Medical So
ciety. . ii'
At the same time. sr. Hart E.
Van Riper, medical director of the
National Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis, said in New York that
the first phase of the nationwide
polio tests is completed and is a
success. He said 644,138 children in
44 states have now received the
first of a series of three injections;'
Since the trials started, Dr.
Korns said, polio has brpken out
in Florida, Texas, and Michigan
and three . polio cases have oc
curred among the 644,000 children
in the study group. . ' I
One of the polio cases is that of
a first-grade pupil in Florida who
is included in the study but who
dm not receive shots of the vac
cine. , V. .v,... .
The other - two eases, ' one in
Michigan and one ini Texas, re
ceived either the vaccine or an in
jection of a blank substance of no
medical value. Half of toe chil
dren in those two states got vac
cine ana naif get the blank sub
stance, and which substance was
given will not be disclosed until
the final stages of the study.
BRITAIN FILES PROTEST
MOSCOW Wt The British Em
bassy . said. Friday it has delivered
a note to the Soviet government
protesting- the ousting of Maj.
Charles Landon, assistant military
attache at the embassy. The note
said Britain considers the Soviet
charge that Maj. Landon engaged
in spying completely unfounded.
CORRECTIOK
Wesson Oil
. .Quart
Delicate
Flavor
Over 4 Million Visit
Forests of Oregon
More than four million recre
ation visits were made to the 19
national forests in Oregon and
Washington 4n 1953, setting an
all-time record for the Pacific
Northwest region. :
The figures were released this
week- by Regional Forester J.
Herbert Stone,' who reported
that: the 1953 figure exceeded by
mora than five percent the pre
vious -'year's total of;' 3,800,000.
The totals are based on sample
counts. . .
Gams were registered in all
types - of recreational activities,
including picnicking, camping,
fishing, hunting, resort use, and
winter sports. Winter sports vis
its had the greatest increase -both
percentagewise and in actual
number. Picnicking, which ac
counted for the greatest number
of visits, was listed by 981,000
as their primary purpose for vis
iting the national forests.
Mt. Hood National forest led
the entire region with a total of
1,428,200 visitors.. , .
"Retirement is like gradua
tion," said Harry B. Johnson, re
tiring assistant superintendent
of Salem public schools, as he
attended a meeting of over 250
,"is!ii,Ctc-Ki--kfci .iinKrj6tratr5 wia
had sathcred to pay tribute to
Johnson at the Senator Hotel
Thursday night
Reunion Calls
Ex-Navy Men
June 24 through the 26 will mark
the 17th annual reunion of . the
Ships of the Navy club of the
United States of America.
The event is to be held at Rock
ford, 111., and during the reunion
there is also to be a reunion of
survivors of the following ships,
USS St. to, Princeton, Gambier
Bay, Johnston, Samuel B. Roberts
and Hoel.
These ships were all damaged
and sunk at Leyte Island during
World War II and this is the first
effort made to get the Navy and
Marines on the .crews of those
abandoned ships together.
Only about 2,500 men are known
to have escaped and it is planned
to honor them at the- reunion.
One of the men, James A. Shel
don, is thought to be making his
home in or near Salem.
Men who were aboard any of
the ships are being asked to con
tact J. T. Geraghty at 305 East
State street, Rockford, Illinois.
gov-
Ban on Island
Travel Lifted
WASHINGTON Wl The i
ernment Friday lifted its ban on
air and sea. travel in the area
around the Marshall Islands atom
ic proving grounds in the Pacific.
The restrictions were set up dur
ing the recent .series of hydrogen
bomb tests.
The announcement was radioed
and mailed to all mariners and
airmen by the Navy's Hydrograph-
ic Office.
Removal of the restrictions per
mits free access to all waters with
in three miles of Eniwetok and
Bikini atolls. These are the actual
test and laboratory sites where a
permanent off-limits " zone of se
curity is maintained.
He has been associated with
(Salem schools since 1944, and for
awhile was principal of the Sa
lem Senior high school. He came
here from Eugene. When school
Si'ierifejident Walter Snyder
resigned as assistant superinten
dent of schools to join the State
Department of Education, John
son took over the assistant's posi
tion, and has held it since.
In addition to being : associ
ated with the Eugene school sys
tem, ne also was in educational
work" at Roseurg, Astoria and in
Montana. .
Rex Putnam, state superinten
dent of public instruction, said
of Johnson that a few men have
had more effect on public edu
cation over the past four dec
ades. He continued that the
state "has been strengthened by
Johnson's complete intellectual
honesty, his sterling character,
and unimpeachable integrity."
Putnam cited that the confi
dence the educators of Oregon
have in Johnson was . exempli
fied by hit unanimous choice as
president of the Oregon High
School Principal's association.
Walter Snyder presented John
son with . a slide projector and
case as a token of appreciation
for his past efforts. The pro
jector was a present from the
Salem Teacher's association and
the Administrator's association.
. Mayor Al Loucks and LeRoy
Stewart, chairman, of the school
board, joined to voice the ap
preciation of the people of Salem
for his work here . and to wish
from the STA was presented by
Dale Merrill, staff member of
Bush School, who was master of
ceremonies.
Big Lumber Order
Looms for Coast
EUREKA. Calif, (fl - West
Coast lumber mills will be called
upon to supply some 80 million
board feet of lumber for Korea
and Formosa under government
assistance programs, Rep. Scud
der (R-Calif) notified local lum
bermen Thursday.
Scudder, in a note to constitu
ents, said the federal overseas ad
ministration has designated Paci
fic Coast mills as bidders on a
41-million-board-foot contract for
Formosa.
BUDGET APPROVED
BONN, Germany 11 The West
German Parliament Friday gave
final approval to a 27,173,000,000
mark ($6,466,000) budget for the
fiscal year 1954-55. One-third of it
is marked for defense costs.
0
Dr. Y. 1. Lam, N. D. Dr. O. Chin, NJ.
DRS. CHAN and LAM
CHINESE NATUROPATHS
Upstairs, 218 North Liberty
Ofllct open Saturday only, 10 .m.
to 1 p.m.! 6 to 1 p.m. Consultation,
blood' prusurt and urlna tests art
frea of charge. Practiced line 1917.
Writ for attractlvt lift. No obli
gation. , t
Open House
For Girl Scouts
The Gir! Scout sumier camp
for Marion, Polk k. , Benton
counties and the whole Santiam
area,, will hold open house Sun
day afternoon, May 23 from noorf
to 4 p.m. fhe camp is located in
a beautifully forested part of
Silver Creek Park in the recre
ation area and is known as Smith
Creek Camp., -
The camp will be open to all
visitors whether or not interest
ed in sending children, and pic
nic lunches may be brought, but
cooking facilities will not be
available. Parents in particular
will be interested in seeing new
features added for the year, in
cluding a new infirmary supplied
by the State Parks Division of
the State Highway Department.
Mrs. Ray Stringham, who will
direct the camp this summer,
will be present, prepared to an
swer inquiries as to entering
children. Vacancies still are
available for either the two-week
session and some of the one
week sessions for girls between
7 and 14, either Girl Scouts or
nonmembers. ,
An entirely new staff, partic
ularly for the kitchen and swim
ming pool, will have charge this
year from June 28 to August 24.
Rigger Killed
Near Rosekrg
ROSEBURG (UP) William
Joseph Berg, 26-year-old rigger
for the E. G. Nelson Logging
company, Roseburg, was killed
yesterday when his ax severed
his safetv belt as he worked a Inn
a 185-foot spar tree.
The Douglas county coroner's
office listed the death as the
sixth logging fatality of the year.
'Summer meal
planning tie
easy way
Today's smart bootmaker uses
short cuts when preparing food
and still serves meals as nourish
ing and appetizing as her grand-,
mother Hd. "Minutemakers from
a package," in June Better
Homes & Garden, is an illus.
trated article in color, that tells
yo how you can serre delight
ful meals and save time, when
to learn the little tricks of
servinc packaged foods. Get
June- Better Homes at Gardens .
today . . . wherever magazines -.
tie sold! - . . ...
ROAD OILING
Now is the rime to settle
that' dust economically
Larmer Transfer & Storage
889 North Liberty - Phone 3-3131
Schaefer's
Nerve Tonic
For functional disturbances,
nervous headaches, nervous
Irritability, excitability, sleep
lessness. $1.00 -$1.75
Schaefer's
Drug Store
Open Dally, 1:30 A.M.-8P.M,
Sundays, Ajn.-i a-.nz.
' US N. Commercial
new 1954 De Soto automatic
PowerFlite
with no clutch . . . the fully-automatic transmission
that beat all others in tests for smoothness and
quietness 1 Come in and try it .. 1 try DeSoto Full-Time Power Steering, tool
W. L. ANDERSON, INC.
368 .Marion St. Box No. 446 Solem, Ore.
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Phone 3-4311