-PAGE TEN The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon,, wcdntsaay Morning, june iz, una STRuWBEBRY BlIIIMF RIE No Injury Done Crop by Re . cent Rains, Reports Here Indicate - (Continued from Page 1.) easing only 1 pound tins for cold aek berries, so far this season. Held, Murdoch 4b Co.. at the West 8alem eannery, Is working on both cold pack and canning strawberries, and is canning - a ioseberrtes. . ' The Starr cannery has been canning gooseberries and cold packing strawberries, and expects nough Etterburgs to start can' Bine Strawberries today. Tbe Paulas- plant is working on gooseberries and both types of strawberries. Strawberries N'ot Hart By Recent Showers The Salem cannerymen say no harm has been done to the straw berry crop by the late rains. Two of the best judges among tnem told the reporter last-night that more help than Injury was done by the showersHowards increas ing the tonnage or the crop. The eold storage plants are re ceiving a great volume of eold pack strawberries, already; com ing from out of town as well as local slants. Tuesday afternoon, barrels of cold pack strawberries were being tken In at both the rew and the old reeelTlng departments of the plant of the Terminal Ice ft Cold Storage company on North Front street. West Salem News The Mock family of Gerth ave- nne left Tuesday morning for AV toras, Calif., where they expect to be gone for a month or six weeks. Miss Marie Sebern of Portland was an over the week-end Tisitor at the D. C. Sebern home on Edge- water street P. M. Roseman attended the graduation exercises of Willamette university which were held at the First Methodist church on Mon day, at which time an old friend of Mr. Roseman's, Dr. Marcy, re ceded his D. D. degree. E. C Stewart made a business trip to Albany on Monday. He was accompanied by M. B. Stegner of Salem. The F. G. Smith house being erected on Edgewater street is being roofed this week. Rafters are roine no on the Trarv ml. dence, which is also being built) on juagewater street. Mr. and Mrs. H. R. McDowell of the Capitol Service station are en tertaining Mrs. McDowell's uncle, J. F. Wade, of Condon, Oregon, this -week. Delbert Moore of Eugene, Ore gon, arrired on Monday for a visit with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Moore of Edgewater street. The two latest Tictimes of the mumps are little Robert Lemon and Bobbie Adams. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Arnold and family Tisited their sons near Monmouth on Monday. West Salem's -visitors at the Rose Testrval in - Portland on Tuesday Included' Miss Claud in e Gerth, Thomas Klinginsmith. Earle Jensen, Major Charles Rob ertson and Jim Summers. ' Mrs. Inex Jenks and Mrs. T. C. Gosser of Salem were entertained at a 1 o'clock luncheon at the home of Mrs. F. P. Wells of 150 Kingwood avenue on Friday. Valley Motor company, Walter T. MoUoy of the Cherry City Baking company and Larry R. Hofer of E. Hofer and Sons. mm ra L S1H HMO eiCK ME PUNT A Chamber af Commerce com m it tee Is launching a drive to assist In the financing of the Ey erly Aircraft Corporation of- Sa lem through the sale of sie.uvu worth of Class A common stock of the corporation. The com mittee made a thorough investi gation, of the company, its per sonnel, assets, and income before recommending that it be approv ed by the Chamber for sponsor ship. Action by Salem Is re garded as Imperative if the city Is to retain this concern. It has many invitations from other ci ties to transfer its business and plant elsewhere. The major lines in which the company is engaged in are school of aeronautics, air transport ser vice,, and manufacturing. The manufacturing is engaged in only 'on a small scale at present and no attempt will De maae io iuuu facture except on orders. The organisers of the corpora tion will have an Investment of tJ2 Kflfl which will be supple. vented by the proceeds of this stock issue. Financial affairs of the concern will be supervised by a committee from the chamber composed ot W. L. Phillips ot the XOTICE OF HEARING OF OB JECTIONS TO FINAL AC COUNT Notice is hereby given that Fan ale Wied Phelps as the duly ap pointed, qualified and acting ad ministratrix of the estate of Caro line Wied. deceased, has rendered abd presented for settlement and filed in the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Marion a final account ot her ad ministration of said estate, and that Tuesday, the ninth day of July, .1929, at the hour of ten aid day, at the courtroom of said . court in the Marion County Court house in the City of Salem, Coun ty of Marion, State of Oregon, .? have been fixed and appointed by i laid court as the. time and the place for the hearing of objec - tlons to said final account and thA settlement thereof. Dated and first published the fifth day of June, 1929. FANNIE WIED PHELPS, as Administratrix of the Estate of Caroline Wied, Deceased. CARSON CARSON. Attorneys for Administratrix. J5-lZ-19-26Jly3 KOTICK OF INTENTION TO IM PROVE THE ALLEY IS BLOCK FROM THE NORTH S LINE OP "D" STREET TO THB SOUTH LINE OF E" STREET BETWEEN WINTER STREET " AND COTTAGE - STREET. Notice Is hereby given that the Common Council of the City of Salem, Oregon, deems it necessary and expedient and hereby declares - Its purpose and Intention to im prove. THE ALLEY IN BLOCK FROM THE NORTH LINE OF D -TREET TO THE SOUTH LINE OF E" STREET BE TWEEN WINTEB STREET AND COTTAGE STREET, at the ex pense of the, abutting and adja. . cent property, except the street and alley Intersections, the ex- tense of which will be . assumed y the City of Salem, Oregon.- by bringing said - portion of " said street to the established grade, .constructing Portland cement con crete earha. and navtnv mU nn. , (ion of said street with a six-inch Portland . cement concrete pave, stent, sixteen feet in width, in ac cordance with the plans and spe cifications therefor which were adopted by the Common Council, en June 3,, 1929, now on file In r the office of the City Recorder. 4nd which are hereby referred to and made a part hereof. The : Common - Council hereby declares its nuroose and intention U make the above described Ira - provement by and through the wreet improvement Department Of the City of Salem. Ofpron - By order of the Common Coun cil tne 3rd day of June. 1929. . . M. POULSEN. Citv Recorder. - Date of first' publication. June I, 1929. . ;-" ; " ' Date of final publication;. June II, 1929. - J5toieinc (Continued from Page 1.) reinsttaement of German courses in the high school, beginning next fall. Superintendent George W. Hug reported that the high school was in need of a meeting room which would accomodate about 100 stu dents and which would be more suitable for smaller meetings than the large auditorium. The matter was discussed with favor but action deferred until further plans are submitted. Need for room for the band classes was also presented, with statement that such a room could be fixed reasonably enough in the attic, this place doing away with much of the noise now niviilnnoH fcw band practice. Request that the roof be repaired and other renova tion made on the child health center building south of the senior high school was presented to the board and action defered. Janitors' supplies for next year were order ed purchased. FELLOWSHIP CITED IS Wift BEFIT (Continued from Page'l.) Pauline Zoe Chambers and Bobbie Braxeau, both of Salem and by Joan and Jeanne Halamicek, both of Hollywood. Calif. Orchestra music was furnished by "Bill" Braseau's group. William Dun lap of the Portland club lead the group singing. A welcome address to the tIsJ- tors was made by Dean Roy Hewitt while Scott Page, chair man of the district convention committee, outlined the work his ctoud was dolnsr in clan nine for the northwest gathering here in August. Claude Barrick. lieu tenant governor of Kiwanis for this district, introduced Mr. Gow-man. SALE OF USTFi CATTLE SCHEDULED In order to give dairymen and breeders an opportunity to secure registered and high grade Hol steins at the most favorable time of year for the purchase of foun dation animals, members of the Oregon Holstein association are holding their first summer sale in Portland Saturday, June IS. Consignments have been care fully selected from 20 of the best herds in the state, by a commit. tee that assures quality cattle for this sale. From Marion county. registered Holstein have been se lected from the herds of F. W. Durbin and Sons, Salem; Mt. An ger College Stock Farm, Mt An gel, and Ernest Werner. ' Silver ton. Each of these herds is well known in Holstein production and show ring ' classes, holding their share of the state records and winning the blues at the larger shows. The auction will be held in a sale pavilion at the corner of Vancouver avenue and Columbia boulevard in Portland. George A. Gue and Sandy Keith hare been selected as auctioneers and tbe sale is under the management of Paul C. Adams, who Is making an effort to have ex-Goxernor Frank O. Lowden of Illinois, and presi dent of the national Holstein Freisian association who is visit ing In Oregon, attend the sale and make the opening talk. Johns Mrs. Ada Johns died at . 8: 15 p. m. Tuesday at the home at 1925 Fir street, aged 73 years. Survived by the following children: Mrs. Bessie Schulx, Mm, Jaabelle Ruth erford, Jesse Johns, all of Salem; Mrs. May Wilson of Portland, Mrs. Gabe Wengren and Eugene Johns, of Oakland. Calif; also two broth ers, one sister and 12 grandchil dren. Funeral announcements later from Rlgdon and Son. OBERSON VISITS Henry Oberson, graduate o f Willamette university a year ago, is visiting in Salem this week. Mr. Oberson and Nat Beaver, former registrar at the university r attend ed the medical school at Harvard college during the past year. where where they made high scholastic standing. They complet ed their Journey west by motor from Boston in 10 days. Mr. Bea ver is remaining in Portland for the present. No More Gas In Stomach And Bowels If you wish to be permanently relieved of gas in stomach and bowels, take Baalmann's Gas Tab lets, which are prepared especially for stomach gas and all the bad effec3 resulting from gas pres sure. That empty, gnawing feeling at the pit of the stomach will disap pear; that anxious, nervous feel ing with heart palpitation will vanish, and you will again be able to take a deep breath without dis comfort. That drowsy, sleepy feeling after dinner will be replaced by a desire for entertainment. Bloat ing will cease. Your limbs, arms and fingers will no longer feel cold and "go to sleep" because Baalmann's Gas Tablets prevent gas from interfering with the cir culation. Get the genuine, in the yellow package, at any good drug store. Price $1. ' Always on hand at DANIEL J. FRY'S 1 800 conversations at once through a cable less than 3 inches thick Tee earth beneath our great cities is so crowded with pipes, cables, etel, that any farther additions create serious engineering problems. Yet the num ber of telephone calls that must flash underground is steadily increasing. The challenge to the scientific minds of the Bell System was to find a way for more conversations in existing conduitsToday, by many improvements, . cables of 1 800 pairs of wires have been perfected. . . Eighteen hundred conversations at once 600 more. than before can pulse through them. - There is no standing still in the Bell System. Bet- ;: . ter and better service at the lowest cost is the goal. ThEPAOncTELEPHONE ; AndTELEGRATH COMPANY; BELL SYSTEM J1 ' Om Ptatty - Osi System - Urnhmol Srs C ; si m . ST Y K-l ELKS PLAN BIG FLAK DAY BITE Salem Lodge to Participate in Annual Exercises at Local Temple Annual . Flag day exercises of the Salem Elks lodge will be held at the Temple Friday night, June 14, with the observance open to the public. All Elks will march ia the parade through the down town section, the line of march to form at the temple at 7:15 o'clock and the parade to get un der way, led by the Elks' hand, promptly at 7:30 o'clock. Mer ritt Davis and August Carl are members of the committee in charge. The program at the temple, will begin at 8 o'clock, a feature of It to be the ritualistic work to be put on by officers of the Sa lem lodge. Carle Abrams will de liver the patriotic address for Flag Day, which is held annually throughout the country as a part of the work of the order. A his tory of the flag will be given by Douglas McKay. Music by the lodge orchestra a group oi songs by tne Elk quartet and solos by Leslie Springer have been included" In the program. Officers of the lodge are: Wil liam H. Paulus, exalted ruler; Howard H. Hulsey, esteemed leading knight; Harold Eakin, es teemed loyal knight, Leroy W. Card, esteemed, lecturing knight, Carl Armstrong, treasurer, Har ry Wiedmer, secretary, Cecil Swope, esquire, Willaxd Wirtx, chaplain, Frank Lynch, inner guard, Otto Ammann, tiler, D. C. Burton. Charles Klrth is chair man of the orchestra, and Ed ward Zahara and Clarence Greig, color guards. x Read the Classified Ads. West Salem Man r Graduates From Old Willamette JtevM. A. Groves, pastor of the Ford Memorial church of this city, graduated from Willamette uni versity on Monday. Rev. Groves has also been attending the Kim ball School of Theology and ex pects to finish bis work there next year. He has been carrying on his school work in connection with his ministerial duties in this eity; he also acts as supply pastor at Sum mit. Mr. and Mrs. V. D. Hobbs of Pendleton, Oregon, have been vis iting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Hess of Rosemont ave. Mrs. Hobbs and Mrs. Hess are sis ters. Mr. and Mrs. Hobbs also vis ited Mr. O. P. West, scoutmaster of the Boy Scouts organization in Salem, before returning to theirj home in Pendleton on Monday evening. W. B. Gerth accompanied by C. B. Giles of the Oregon News and Mr. Van Welder manager of the Salem Steam Laundry, went on a fishing trip to Alsea on Sun day returning home with 5 IT nice trout. Attend Commencement Mr! and Mrs. R. E. Pattlson and mother Mrs.. Anna Pattlson drove over to MCMinnville on Sunday to attend the graduation exercises at Lintield College. Horace Pattlson, son of Mrs. Anna Pattlson being one of the graduates. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Larsen from MeMinnville visited over Sun day with Mr. Larsen 's mother, Mrs. Lillian Larsen, of the Edgewater Courts. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Fellows re turned on Sunday evening from Eula, Ore., where they had been visiting Mrs. Fellows parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Blakely. Mrs. Blakely returned home with them for a short visit. Mrs. Alta Gilliam and Miss Ivy Richardson arrived from eastern Oregon on Monday evening to spend the .summer with Mr. and Mrs. Dale Lemon at their home at 1321 Edgewater St. Mrs. Gilliam is Mrs. Lemon's mother while Miss Richardson is her aunt. Mrs. George Davis has rented her house on McNary avenue to Mr. Stuart who haa moved here from Dallas. Mrs. Dennison Dies Word was received here Tues day of the death ot Mrs. L. C. Dennison who was a former res ident ot this eity. Mrs. Dennison died at Medford, Oregon, after a seven weeks' Illness. Mrs. Jack Gosser of Kingwood aveune, had as her guest on Tues day, Mrs. T. C. Gosser of Salem. W BHI IS GREATER IN '29 Salem Ranks High Among Cities of -Oregon in Season's Figures May building activities in the Pacific coast area exceeded those of the corresponding month of last year, according to the month ly report of S. W. Straus - and company. Just issued. The total was $35,232,888 and the excess over May, 1928. was $221,600. The May figure is 17 per cent below the April figure for this year. In Oregon the total for nine principal cities for May was Sl, 779.981, which is slightly ahead of the April total but a good deal behind the total for May, 1928. The May Oregon totals are: No. of Permits Amt. Albany 7 $ 4.305 Astoria 17 6,203 Eugene 55 75,235 Klamath Falls . 65 153.310 La Grande .... 5 17,350 Marshfield 11 '2.350 Medford 35 61.645 Portland 702 1.331.725 Salem 51 127,859 Total 947 $1,779,981 Special pictures of the Port land Rose Festival will be shown today at the Elsinore theatre, the films having .been 'shot" this week by the Metro-Goldwyn com pany in Portland. niHPi iOIIP HERE SOON The Redwood Empire land cruise and caravan tour of Cali fornia officials will be In Salem Monday, June 24, according to word received by the Salem cham ber of commerce Tuesday. The party will arive here about noon, leaving again at 2 o'clock. Officials of the chamber or com merce have wired inquiries as to how many persons will be in the caravan, in order that entertain ment may be provided here. It may be possible to welcome the visitors at the regular chamber of commerce luncheon. The caravan will be under the direction of M. Van Rensselar, chairman; Clyde Edmundson, gen-j eral manager; and Vilham Dey sher, president of the Redwood Empire association. The caravan will leave Grants Pass Sunday morning, June 23, following participation in the ceremonies at the Hiaachi bridge, at Crescent City, Cal. The party will spend Sunday night at Eu gene, where entertainment will be provided. An elaborate banquet was given in Salem last year when a similar caravan stepped over night here. The party, carrying the mess age of reciprocity between states and communities to keep tourists in the west and acquaint them with all of its attractions, will tour Oregon, Washington and British Columbia. Ill WHITE TIKES Mil. Ivan White, Willamette uni versity graduate this year, begins work as full time director of boys' work at the T. M. C. A. to day. Mr. White has been serv ing as part time assistant In this work for several months. While la the mnlverslty he was promin ent as a tennis player; he was al so prominent in other sports. Classes in swimming began on their summer, schedule Monday. Registration, especially ta ' the boys classes, was heavy. .Begin ners will have from 1:30 to 2:05 on Monday, Tuesday and Friday; grammar school boys 9 to 12 years old will swim Monday, Tues day, Friday and Saturday from 2:15 till 2:55. -Boys In Junior high will have from 3:05 to 3:45 on the same days, and high school boys will have from 3:55 till 4:45. Older employed boys will have from 7 till 8 o'clock on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday: newsboys will have from 7:15 to 8 o'clock. This summer schedule is in effect from June 10 to Sep tember 21. - PUPILS TAKE PART Hi rails Just 139 high school and Junior high school pupils were enrolled in the four bands organised by O. P Thayer, 1and instructor who has Just given to the city super intendent his report on his first year's work In the Salem schools. The membership was divided: High school boys, 44; high school girls, 37; Parrish Junior high, 46; Leslie Junior high, 18. Such work in the school has never been so successful as this year. Investment per pupil tor tbe year amounted to $6.50 for the high school boys and $3.25 for the girls. Receipts for the year totaled $1,021.15, including donations in come from concerts and $371 which was borrowed to carry on. Expenses reached $891.04. PIANO RECITAL Pupils of airs. Cora Hendry tonight. First Congregational charrh 8:00 o'clock pwbUc invited. 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