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The Capital Journal from Salem, Oregon • Page 22

Location:
Salem, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
22
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Notes on the News Capital Journal, March gSS-ffos, 8)- DENNIS THE MENACE Ketchani Tele-Views Federal Reserve Board Uses Power Cautiously ft, O'BRIEN iviy OwH. 1MB, Nw Tw4 Si "We were just helping the Hoover Commission cut down on the governments paper work." for reserves by lowering or raising the interest rate it charges on its loans. This is known as the reserve bank's "discount rate." And that discount rate is the third main way in which the reserve system can change the richness of tile economic climate, making money and credit more plentiful, or harder to get. since it can regulate the availability of money and credit, the reserve system has Use power to keep the supply of money and credit from getting bigger than the supply of goods to be purchased. When buying power outruns the supply of goods, bidding for the goods may start, and prices may go up.

That is what is generally meant by inflation. By using its powers to keen iho ouppiy oi money ana credit in line with the supply of goods, the re serve system acts to prevent price iiara uiiu ureaKs, ana to create siaoie values." By easing credit durimr tha iness downturn, and turning to a slightly less easy attitude when activity picked up, the reserve board over the past two war. has been a big factor in keeping prices level and making saving worth- wiiiie. The reserve board also sets th limits to which credit can be used in stock transactions. it was given that aulhnrilv oflor the 1929 crash to help keep speculation on credit from controlling Ihe market.

When theboard last year raised margin requirements from SO to 60 per cent of the stock's price, it acted not because the price of stocks was rising but because, in its opinion, credit was beginning to be used in a way that looked dangerous to the board. pliNTY HAPPENED TOOAV! I HAD TO STAND IN THE CORNER tOU Mi HOUR AND NOW fcVE GOTTA SET NEW WALL PAPER' Spelling Contest Finals To Be Held at Parrish WEDNESDAY ON KOINTV: 3 p.m., KOIN Kitchen Betty Davis preparei "Texas Hash." 4 p.m., Armchair Theatre "No Escape" starring Raymond Burr, Bandy Stuart and Craig Stevens. 6:45 p.m., Perry Como Show Como solos "No More" and "Sincerely." With the Ray Charles Singers, be then does "You'll Always Be My Lifetime Sweetheart." 7 p.m., Blue Ribbon Bouts Chamrene Songkitrat of Bangkok, Thailand, and Raton of Mexico City Mexico, in 12 Round National Boxing Association World Bantamweight championship bout. 9 p.m.. The Millionaire A spinster schoolmarm in a private boy's school receives a $1,000,000 windfall from an anonymous benefactor in "The Story of Nancy Marlborough." 10 p.m., Stories of the Century Unprovoked blood lust leads the "Apache Kid," an Indian youth trained and trusted by a venerable U.S.

Army Chief of Scouts in Arizona in the 1890's, along a path of robbery, rape and murder that ends with his death at the hands of a Mexican beauty who has been one of his many tragic victims. 10:30 p.m., City Desk Chuck Foster and on-the-spot films of today's top local news. 10:35 p.m.. Great Decisions Subject: "Have We A Stake In Asia?" Questions to be asked of the panel: "Is Asia Important to the U.S. Economy?" "Is Asia Important to U.S.

Strategy?" "Could the U.S. Win Out in Asia?" "What Is Your Opinion?" 11 p.m., Showtime on Six "The Man Who Cheated Himself" starring Lee Ji Cobb, Jane Wyatt and John Dall. WEDNESDAY ON KPTV: 9 a.m., Morning Movie "Boys Reformatory." 11 a.m., Home A 40-pound octopus named "Arlene" will appear as special guest and will come face to face with her namesake, Arlene Francis. Discussion of the RH factor. Ceramic series.

12 Noon, Schools in Session The 4th graders at Forest Hills will demonstrate the art of Folk Dancing, under the direction of Mrs. Donna Lawrence. 12:15 p.m., Matinee Theater "Thursday's Child" with Stewart Granger. 2 p.m., What's Cooking With Barbara Angell. John Cameron Swayze's favorite: "Southern Yam 4i Orange Casserole." Ham.

2:30 p.m., Friend of Family With Mike Davenport. Guest is Mr. Clarence E. Harveson, dog psychologist. 6:30 p.m., Life is Worth Living With Bishop Sheen.

Modern world's need for discipline and self denial. 7 p.m., Norby Pearson Norby rewrites the Cinderella legend as he thinks it really happened with the Prince Charming as a sure prey for the girl in the glass sliper when she set her mind on matrimony in "The Cinderella Story." 8 p.m., I Married Joan "How to Win Friends," with Joan Davis. A' misunderstanding leads Joan Davis to fear she is losing her friends. 8:30 p.m., My Litle Margie Margie is forced to deal from the, bottom of the deck to fight Vern's ban on men and gambling in fj'he Las Vegas Story." 9 p.m., Kraft TV Theater "The Emperor with Ozzie Davis Is a story of a fugitive from justice, who by cuning ana ruthless-Bess establishes himself as emperor of a small West Indian island. 10:30 p.m., Death Valley Days "The Lost Peglcg Mine" A mad race between a western ranch-bred girl and an easterner to claim title to a famous mine.

i 11 p.m., Nite Owl Theater "The Man Who Walked Alone" With Kay Aldrich, and Walter Catlett. i THURSDAY OX KOINTV: 3 p.m., KOIN Kitchen Betty Davis prepares "Creamy Fudge." 4 p.m., Armchair Theatre "No Escape" with Raymond Burr, Handy Staurt and Craig Stevens. 6:45 p.m., Jane Froman Show The setting for the romantic long medley is sunny Florida. 7 p.m., I Search for Adventure "The Road Back" filmed record of Dr. William B.

Treutle and wife in Africa. Three years ago, Dr. Treutle of Tacoma, was given onlv six months to live. So Newsman Loses Pants and Misses White By BARMAN United Press Staff Correspondent open to the public without charge. The 20 finalists comprise the two best spellers from each of 10 semifinal spell-downs held at Woodburn, Kelier, Miri-LInn, Mt.

Angel, State School for the Blind, Dallas Rickreall. Falls City, Turner and Amity. Eighty-four school champions participated In the semifinals. Every school In Marion and Polk Counties, Northern Linn County and Southern Yamhill County. both public and parochial, was entitled to participate.

The Mid-Valley Spelling Contest, now in its fifth year, is sponsored by The Oregon Statesman. and Radio KSLM. A large portion of the grand finals will be broad- aa! rlli-nct frnm 41. a Tat.rlVt at a am ToP PriM 100 defense bond, A dinner for the grand finalists, their teachers and judges will be given by the sponsors at Parrish at 8 p.m. Thursday, Just belo the contest itself.

In alphabetical order of their last names, here are the contest ants in the grand finals, wltl their age, graae ana scnoor. 1 It To Im. Farm Prospect Declared Good The lone term outlook for the farmer is good, John J. Lacev. Chicago, American Farm Bureau representative, said while in Salem Tuesday.

Lacey based his optimism on the fact that the farmer is steadily becoming more efficient, that he produces almost twice as much as he did before the war and will produce more in the future due to better machinery, improved lecnnoiogy, fertilizers, etc. This plus a steadily increasing population, all of whom must eat, 'Even today the position of the farmer is not as bad as the current statistics sometimes make it appear, though the farmer has been going through an unpleasant readjustment for several years. But he produces more efficiently and fewer farmers now divide the national farm income than did a few years ago. Lacey said the farmer benefits more now from improved tech nology than from price supports. The Farm Bureau Federation fa vors flexible price supports, not the high mandatory supports.

He predicted that the present congress will not change the flexible support law in force now, although it has a Democratic majority in each nouse. uur intormation is that the flexible support program will get a thorough tryout before it is changed," he added. Lacey owns an 80-acre farm In northern Illinois, where he aaid farmers are still doing pretty weu despite lower prices, i Prove Identity GREEN RIVER, Wyo. Wl The identity of a gunman who terror- lzeu southern Wyoming now is established definitely but anv hone of explaining his strange personality appears to have died with him in a hail of shotgun pellets. Mrs.

Ida M. Billings of Baldwin Park, Monday identified the gunman as her son, Charles Ernest Billings 23. She also explained why Billings took the name of an ex-convict, Melvin H. Gray, several years ago. Mrs.

Billings said Charles was driving a car on approval from an auto tirm in 19o3 when he was involved In an accident. She said he took the name of Gray, whom he had known at Thermopolis. a year earlier, to avoid a damage suit. Mrs. Billings said her son didn't know Gray had a prison record.

Billings killed two men. wound ed two others and held a 17-year- oia Doy nostage for eight hours before he was shot to death by a posseman in this southwestern Wyoming railroad town Friday night, Daughter Born to 4 Corners Minister FOUR CORNERS It's a girl: A daughter, their first child, was born to Rev. and Mrs. Joe An drew Harding, Monday, March 7, at Salem General Hospital. She has been named Sarah Kathryn, ana weighed 7 pounds, 14 ounces.

Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Harding of Kcnnett, and Mrs. John B. Walkup of Mcintosh, Fla.

The Rev. Mr. Harding is pastor of Trinity Methodist Church at Four Cor ners. The U.S. match industry pro duced 1214 billion books of matches a year.

5:00 p.m. Plnkl. Lee 5:15 p.m. Happy Birthday 5:30 p.m. Date m.

Big Roundup 6:30 p.m. News, Sport. Weather 6:45 Fishing 7.00 p.m. Cavalcade of Sport. 6:10 p.m.

Lucky Sport. Tim. 8 30 p.m. Industry 8.45 p.m. Sportsman's Club 8.00 p.m.

Lone Wolf 6-30 p.m. -Otv Detective 10 00 rmnufl Plsvhia 10:30 p.m. Channel 13 Theater 4 the Patsy Baker, 14, 8th, Buenia Crest Uur, Ann Cain 13. Afh. Tilrnatt1.

By WASHINGTON l-The federal reserve system can make money hard or easy to borrow and thus affect your pocketbook by its loans 10 DanKs and by its buying and selling of government bonds. It can also do the same thing by changing the amount of reserves it requires its 7.000 member banks to keep on deposit with reserve banks. But changing the reserve rate is described by Reserve Board Chairman William McChesney Martin Jr. as a "blunt instrument" that he hestitates to use very often. It hits all banks, those with plenty of reserves and those with thin reserves alike, tieing up or liberating operating funds, changing the very basis on which the banks do business.

So the Federal Reserve Board likes to hold reserve rate changes back, for use to counter basic economic changes, principally to attack or prevent inflation iby raising reserve requirements) or to stimulate the economy in times of recession tby freeing reserves). ihe system prefers to use two other, more delicate and selective, ways of increasing or decreasing reserves. The first of these is Its "open market operations." This is the buying and selling of government securities by the reserve system. ii a reserve hank buys a govern ment security in the open market not from the government, that is, it has to pay for it, just as you would have to pay. The reserve bank's check in pay ment for the security is written on the 2Bi-billion-dollar national gold hoard for which the reserve system is trustee.

This kind of a check, based directly on the na tion's gold reserve, increases the reserves of the bank to which it is made out. So by buying securities In the epon market, the reserve system can at will increase bonk reserves by just the amount it wants. Of course, the opposite is also true. By selling securities it owns, the Fed can cut reserves. This buying and selling of re serves, therefore, can be used and is used, daily to hold a deli cate balance between the econ omy need for credit, and the availability of credit.

One of the privileges of membership in the reserve system is that of borrowing from a reserve bonk A sharp seasonal demand for credit may exhaust the lending power of a commercial bank (that is, it may not have enough reserves left to meet the local needs for credit). This can happen in any farm town in the planting season, when tarmers borrow to put in their crops, or it can happen anywhere else. The demnad for credit shoots up sharply in cities in the late summer and early fall, when bus inessmen borrow to stock up their shelves for the fall and winter trade. bf the prime purposes of the reserve system is to avoid sucn seasonal or local "freezing" of credit just when it is needed most Without enough elasticity to meet these swings, you might be thrown out of a job for the simple reason that your employer might not be able to get the credit with which lo pay your salary, or otherwise operate his business, during the seasons of the year when he operates on credit. Inability to meet seasonal swings with quickly adjusted credit resources would put a major crimp in agriculture.

It could prevent your getting a loan to buy the house you want. It would make for violent ups and downs in interest rates, because interest is the price of money high when money is scarce, low when money is plenti ful. The reserve system has tight ened the money and credit supply recently, mainly by selling Treasury securities in the open market. It has done it gradually, ana gent ly, aiming to give business enough credit for growth, but at the same time to prevent an inflationary credit binge. The tightening up followed more than a year when the reserve system had followed a policy of "active ease" to help spur business out of the downturn of 1953-54.

During such periods of tightening up, the fact that memner nanus can borrow from their reserve bank acta as an escape valve. The loan increases the borrowing bank's reserves. Say it is a check for $1,000. With the reserve ratio at 20 per cent, new reserves of St. 000 can be used by the commer cial banking system to make loans up to about $5,000.

The reserve system can encour age or discourage such borrowing We Take Better Care of Your T.V. XP TELEVISION Wp SERVICE CO. Gr'W 1410 S. 12th Ph.4-3327 Open 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.

Men from Marrs Want to Serve You rca Victor Twenty top spellers chosen from four counties will compete in the grand finals of the Statesman's Mid-Valley Spelling Con test at Parrish Junior High at 7:45 p.m. Thursday. The event House Party W. NICHOLS fitting. There were big pants) and maium-sue pants, but no little ones.

And time was wasting. mac nappens to live in the neighborhood of nearby Fort Mever. Ana it tnere is any consolation lit inncH ThOIIOhtO ha urnrlrnri nn inre memui picture oi wnat may happened to the character who un- wittingly willed him the balloon! pants, with several acres to spare! in the rear. 1 He couia see some tat oia isiana nopping colonel getung preiuea up place like, say Tokyo, and finding tumseit trying to squeeze Into set of knee length formal britches. School Boards Rap Wage Tax Strong opposition to Increasing teacners minimum salaries deve loped Tuesday as the House Edu cation Committee began consider ation of a Senate-approved bill to iix a flood or $3,000 a year.

Gardner Knapp, Salem School Board member representing the Oregon School Boards said the measure is an infringement upon the rights of school districts to decide their salary schedules. itep. wayne uicsy, Monroe, a committee member, said the bill would affect only 64 teachers in the state. He and Cecil Posey, secretary of the Oregon Education hotly debated Posey's contention that higher minimums would attract better teachers. The legislation would establish minimums of $.1,000 for teachers without a college degree, $3,300 for those with a bachelor degree, and $3,600 for those with a masters degree.

The minimum now Is $1,1100. The committee took no action on the bill. It also didn't act on a measure to have driver training In public schools. In 1950, there was one U.S. aulo for every three persons over 13 years old and the Twentieth Cen tury fund estimates that by 1957 there will be one tor every two to two and a half people in that age group.

is 1 Colleen Crsnnell, 13, 8th, Harry fjln, Pedel. Betty Eder, th, Woodburaj. Carl Graffenberger, 14, 3th, Sa On Television KPTV (27)-KOINTV (6) UHF VHF WEUNEBWAT 1:00 pjn. KPTV-Howdy Doody KOIN Red Dunning vinn TRi 8:30 pjn. KPTV Ear 27 VVi." ill.

1UUUB m. KOIN Cartoon pjn. KPTV bee. Hear KOIN News, w'th'r, iptl. 8:15 pjn.

KPTV See. Hear KLOR Sherm Washburn 6:30 p.m. KPTV Bishop Sheen KOIN News KLOR TBA (1:45 p.m. KOIN Perry Como 7:00 p.m. KPTV-Norby KOIN Pabst Bouts KLOR Homer Bell 7:30 p.m.

KPTV-Coke Time KOIN Pabst Bouts VI OD rticnsulBnri 7:43 p.m. KPTV News KOIM Rprt Barber pjn. KPTV I Married Joan r.uiiN vriiur uouirey 8:30 pjn. KPTV My Little Margie KLOR Stu Erwin 9:00 pjn. KPTV Kraft Theater KLOR Masquerade 9:30 p.m.

KOIN I've Got Secret KLOR Who Said That? 10:00 p.m. KPTV This Is Your Life KOIN stories oi century KLOR TBA :30 p.m. KPTV Death Valley KOIN Great Decisions KLOR News 10:45 P.m. K1X1H Theater 11:00 pjn. KPTV Nite Owl jvwiii situ uum THURSDAY 8:00 a.m.

KPTV Today 8:45 a.m. KOIN Fun to reduet 9:00 a.m. KPTV Movie KOIN Valiant 9:13 a.m. KOIN Secret Storm 8:30 a m. KOIN Godfrey a.m.

KPTV Ding Dong 10:30 KPTV Way olt worm KlllN lionirev KOIN Welcom Traveler 11:00 a.m. KPTV Home KOIN Robert wwii 11:30 a.m. KOIN Art Linkletter 12:00 noon KPTV YWCA Show KOIN Visitln Timo 11:13 p.m. KPTV Matinee Theater IAIM Viaftfn' TiTTial 12:30 p.m. KOIN Bob Crosby p.m.

nuiiN tirignier vaym 1:15 p.m. KOIN Love of Life 1:30 p.m. KOIN Your Account 2:00 pjn. KPTV What's Cooking KOIN Garry Moore p.m. KPTV Family Friend KOIN Portia 2:45 p.m.

KOIN Road of Lift. 3:00 p.m. KPTV Greatest Gift KOIN Eetty Davia KLOR Public Service 3:15 p.m. KPTV Golden Windows p.m. KPTV One Man's Family KOIN Strike It Rich KLOR Ron Myron Show 9-4 nm.

KPTV MISS MarlOW 4:00 pjn. KPTV Hawkins Falli klor Kukla. Fran. Ollle p.m. KPTV First Love 4:30 pjn.

KPTV Mr. Sweeny KOIN Search KLOR Keeping Boom 4:45 pjn. KPTV Modern Romance KOIN Guiding Lite 8:00 p.m. KPTV Howdv Doody KOIN Red Dunning KLOR TBA pjn. KPTV Bar 27 KOIN Mr.

Moon 5:45 p.m. p.m. koin uanoons KOIN Week in Soorts KT.OR Sherm Washburn 3:30 p.m. KPTV Hopalong Cassidy KOIN News 6:30 p.m. KLOR Pond's Theater 6:45 p.m.

KOIN Jane Froman 7:00 p.m. KPTV City Detectiv KOIN I S'rch Adventure 7:30 p.m. KPTV Dinah Short KOIN Name That Tune KLOR tone Ranner 7:45 pjn. KPTV News Caravan pjn. KPTV Groucho Marx KOIN Rav MUland KLOR TBA 8 30 p.m.

KPTV Waterfront KOIN Climaxl KLOR TBA 9:00 p.m. KPTV Dragnet KLOR Star Tontte 9:30 p.m. KPTV Ford Theater KOIN 4 Star Playhouse KLOR Madison Sq. Gdn. 10:00 p.m.

KPTV Lux Theater KLOR TBA 10:30 p.m. KOIN-City Desk tKi-Ajn news in tun. TCT.OR Theater 11:00 p.m. KPTV Nite Owl AUin Bnowumi so KVAL-TV Channel 1J WEDNESDAT 4:00 p.m. Hawkins Till 4:15 p.m.

Ship's Reporter 4:10 m. Mr Sweenev 4:45 p.m. Stringer thn nc. 5:00 p.m. Plnkl.

Le. 5:30 p.m. Date p.m. Big Roundup 6:30 6:45 p.m. Jan Murray Show 7:00 p.m.

Bishop Sheen 7:30 p.m. I Am the Law 6:00 p.m. Dangerous Assignment 6:30 p.m. Life of Riley 6:00 p.m. Favorite Story 9 30 m.

Madison Sq. Garden 10:00 p.m. Channel 13 Theater TnunsDAT 4:00 p.m 4:15 p.m.-4:30 Ttf 6:00 p.m.-5:30 p.m.-6:00 p.m 6:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m.-7:30 D.m.-8'00 p.m 6:30 p.m.. 6:00 p.m 6:30 p.m..

10:00 p.m 10:30 p.m. -Hawkins Falls -Ship's Reporter -Mr Sweeney -Stringer than Fie. -Pinkie Lee -Ouest Book -Big Round-up -News. Sports. Weather -Industry -Range Rider -Llberaee -Groucho Marx -Amos n' Andy -Mr.

District Attorn. -Ford Theater -Famous Playhouse -Wrestling FRIDAY 4 00 p.m. Hawkins Falls 4:15 m. Ship's Reporter 4:30 p.m. Mr.

Sweeney 4:45 p.m. Stranger Than Fiction PHILCO Factory Supervised Service Guaranteed Kepalrs on All Makr8 Raytheon Bonded Insured TV CLINIC $(15 Per Call Phone 1-2801 Day or Evenings he sold his dental practice and decided the time had come to fulfill a life-long ambition to see the Dark Continent of Africa. His health returned by leaps and bounds, and finally, he was able to film the weird Karamoja tribe. 8 p.m., Ray Milland Show The man who comes to dinner, without an invitation disrupts the lives of Prof, and Mrs. Ray McNulty.

The uninvited guest is a Broadway playwright who comes to Comstock TJ. because he's intrigued by a play written by om. of the professor's drama students. 8:30 p.m.. Climax Michael Rennie co-stars with Zsa Zsa Gabor and Maureen O'Sulivan in a television adaption of E.

Phillips Op-penheim's intriguing tale of World War I espionage, "The Great Impersonation." 9:30 p.m., Four Star Playhouse Ida Lupino plays the role of a woman paroled from prison who wants to keep out of trouble but Innocently becomes involved in a murder, in "Eddie's Place." 10:30 p.m., City Desk Chuck Foster and on-the-spot films of today's top local news. 10:35 p.m., Showtime on Six "Hellgate" starring Sterling Hay-den, Joan Leslie and Ward Bond. THURSDAY ON KPTV: 9 a.m., Morning Movie "Gang Bullets." 11 a.m., Home West coast editor Marjorie Trumbull will be icon "At Home With Motion Picture Star, Jack Lemmon. Cooking-different kinds of main dish soups. Dr.

Milton Levine, professor of pediatrics at the New York Hospital "When Children Ask About Sex." 12:15 p.m., Matinee Theatre "Down Missouri Way" with Martha O'Driscoll, and John Carradine. 6:30 p.m., Hopalong Cassidy "Copper Hill," with Wm. Boyd. A feud breaks out between the Sioux and the Apaches and neither Chief knows anything about it, and Hoppy suspects that there might be a wolf in Indian's clothing. 7 p.m., City Detective "The Case of the Paper Button," with Rod Cameron.

Fleeing from the police, Lusia and Wayne Jaffe hide out in Wayne's suposedly deserted ancestral home. 7:30 p.m., Dinah Shore Plays hostess to Johnny Mercer, and devotes the entire show to such Mercer tunes as: "You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby," "Too Marvelous for Words." 8:30 p.m., Waterfront "The Man," Preston Foster as star. Cap'n John hauls a man aboard the "Cheryl, Ann," and with him, a heavy case containing a strange assortment of lead pipes and balls. 9:30 p.m., Ford Theater Merle Oberson portrays a Broadway star whose sense of values as well as her health attract the attention of a handsome surgeon in "Second Sight." 10 p.m., Lux Video Theater "All About Eve." The exposing of ruthlessly ambitious young actress who used and betrays all those who try to help her. 11 p.m., Nite Owl Theater "Bridge of San Luis Rey," with Lynn Bari.

WASHINGTON (UP) What happened to Rovden Stewart shouldn't happen to a good re porter. The poor guy had to pass up the annual White House press correspondent's banquet Saturday night, lie couldn't find his pants. Mac is one of those proper gentlemen who live an orderly life. Things are done on schedule. The brushing of teeth at 7 a.m.

daily Hit the shower at five after. Pick un the naner off the front stooo 7:30, and pity the paper boy if he tarried on the way. Well, my friend puts his tuxedo on once a year to go to this bkack tie party. He is a fespector of leaders, and he would rather be caught dead than insult the President of the United States. Might Startle Guests But a man nt a formal, party witnout pants mtgnc be frowned at, and old Mac doesn't like to be frowned Each year after the party, the reporter drives home, shucks off his tux and hangs it in the foyer so that he won't forget to fetch it to tiie cleaners first tiling Monday, for a brushing off of the lint and a thorough cleaning.

lie wants to be ready for the next annual. When it comes back, he leaves it in the bag and hangs it in the back of the clothes closet. A couple of days before the ban quet, Mac gets his fish and soup out and tries it on for size, in case he has put on a couple of pounds in the last 12 months. He's a little guy, feet 0 1-2 and is only 28 inches around the middle. Well, the other night was time for the trying on.

First Mac put on the jacket and stood before the mirror. A perfect fit. Wow! The Pants And then he tried on the pants. They were there all right, but they were a size 42, and the pant legs were so long they could have stretched from here to the speak er's platform at the Statler, where the party was held. He put on his work suit, and If you don think that cleaner didn get a going over! The cleaner said he sure was sorry, sir, and would Mac UKe to look over his collection of left-over tux pants? Mac, his dander way up, would, and he did.

He tried on 20 pairs of britches with Uie silk stripes down the legs. Not a one came anywhere near Big-Headed? CALL 34163 TV Repiln and Service All Mikei ind Hodeli Faclorr-lralned Eipertl Central Electric and Motorola Wei and Service MASTER 365 N. Commercial Ph. 3-4163 GREEN STAMPS JIIE lem Academy. Eileen Hoffman, 14, 8th, Dallaf Robert Hoyscr 12, 7th, Riverside.

I Susan Jean Hunt, 14, Bin, Broadacrcs. I Charlene Kauble, 13, 8th, WII- lamina. Lonnie Kilmer, 13, 8th, Perrjr. dale. (l Lores King, 13, Oth, Victor Point.

Carol Marx, 14, 8th, Oak Grove. Michael Mills, 12, 8th, Clear Lake. Catherine Music, 14, 8th, Sub limity. Jean Neimeycr, 13, 7th, Leslie Junior High. Carol Nelson, 12, 8lh, Bridge port.

Sara orr, 13, mn, aiayion. Joan Plcha, 13, 8th, Willard. Joan Sannes, 12, 7th, Mt Angel. UNION HILL CLUB UNION HILL Mrs. Robert Humphreys will be hostess to the Union Hill Home Economics ciun on Wednesday of this week.

Each member is to wear something green in honor of St. ratriwi day. 12th Salem, Ore. Anna Strong Exonerated By Reds of Spy Charges PAY AS WE SERVICE Television Han with it guaranteed maximum limit for one full year on your TV set. 1.

$44.50 for acrvice charges. 2. $64.50 for service and parts (picture tube excluded). 3. $96.50 for all service, parts and picture tube.

Rates for 24" and 27" on request. All work we perform on your set will 1)0 charged for at current rates and will be applied toward the maximum figures listed above. No charge will be made for service and parts furnishod within the year in excess of the above figures (antenna work not included). For only $3.50 you may have a call to your home to sec if your set meets the requirements of this amazing new plan. Look what you get for this small fee: (a) Your set tuned for best performance on the new channel 12 (b) Linearity adjustments.

(cj Membership in this new plan if your set is acceptable. NOTE: If your set needs service or parts In order to put It in normal operating condition, these will be provided upon your request at normal rates and fees which will apply to figures listed above. For additional Information and the best service in town call 4-3327. When she was deported. Miss Strong denied to newsmen that she had been engaged in espionage, Miss Strong, now 69, went to Russia in 1921 for the American friends relief mission.

She became a correspondent for Hearst mag azines and the North American Newspaper Alliance, traveling widely in Russia, China and cen tral Europe. At the time of her deportation she was listed as a correspondent of the "Allied Labor News. In 1930, she founded the Moscow Daily News, the first English lan guage newspaper in the Russian capital. It closed a few days before her arrest. She wrote many books, maea zine articles and newspaper stories on the Soviet Inion.

In 1926 she lectured at several american col leges. She said she loved Russia and she defended nearly every phase of the Communist regime. The daughter of a Congregational minister. Miss Strong was born in Friend, Nov. 14, IMS She was graduated from Oberlin College at the age of 19 and became a writer on a Seattle labor paper.

In 1932, she marrewi a Russian offical named Joel Shubin. Her husband bad died in 1942. MOSCOW W) The Soviet government has exonerated American writer Anna Louise Strong of spy charges filed against her in 1949. The official Tass News Agency says she was framed by Lavrenty P. Beria, the Russian police boss who was executed in 1953 as a traitor.

A Tass announcement last night said an investigation had proved that the charges aeainst Miss Strong who defended the Red cause in more than 25 years of Writing were "without grounds." Miss Strong was arrested and deported from the Soviet Union. The action caused a sensation at the time and was never fully explained. Even she never detailed what her difficulties were about. In Los Angeles, Miss Strong said Ihe was delighted at the Russian announcement. "I am veiy glad they found out there was nothing asainst me," she said.

"I always thought that some time they would get this Cleared up." Miss Strong has lived in Los Angeles since her return tg the United States. She said she would go back to Russia "if any newspaper, news agency or publishing hnufe would like to send ma to do a series of articles." 11 Television Service Co. Service till 9:00 P.M. Call 3 9201 Marr Radio and TV 1140 South Commercial St, 1410 South.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1888-1980