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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1932)
Tlif OREGON STATESMAN. Saleci. Oregon, Thnrsday Mornfnsr, September 22, 1931 T mm I I FASCIST GOVERNMENT URGED TRAGEDY i j "SHOW ME THE WAY, TO GO HOME" j 0 GREET II 1 1. --v;. r PAGE TWELVE zfi;s WILL MKT T MB DELEGATED 1 EI11S t I Service Clubs Name men to Welcome Eugene Group - Coming to Fair 1 Mr. Has. Bt&xovtz Doorjj u ...When Eugene's state fair dele gation, due to arrive here at. 10' o'clock -Monday morning ' In 14 coaches, leaves the train. It will be greeted by a crowd of 100 or more Salem citizens, . representa tives ot local civic organization. -Plans for greeting; the Engenie crowd, , which will stage a paradja on the downtown streets before gotng to the fairgrounds, are bet ing completed by W. M. Hamilton!, chairman of the local chamber of commerce . fair committee. j "Eugene is showing great inj ures t in the fair this year, and is sending an unusually large deleV gation, including three bands and ' other special features and , it is fittinr that Salem should Par the Tlsitors courtesy of" a proper re' ceptlon", Hamilton said in an nouncing plans to receive the Lane county group. Mr. - Hamilton has asked each service club and civic group in; town to delegate 10 or 12 men to join the reception committee of a; hundred persons, and already Ro tary and Lions clubs have ap pointed their representatlvee. Cherrians and Kiwanis clubs are expected to name their delegates oday, and other clubs will do so ater this week. Chairman Hamilton announces the following appointments from Rotary and Lions clubs on the re ception committee: Rotary V. P. McNamara, chair man, W. M. Hamilton, C. P. Bi shop, J. E. Blinkhorn, Irving Big.Iow, a n of John Bigelow, United State MinkUr to Franc udir Smith, C. F. Breithaupt, J. T. De- President Abraham Lincoln, b a great admirer el Italy's strong aeaa laney, W. B. Minier, F. G. Decke- and a dot friend of the former Kaiser qf Germany, with whom he went bach, R. E. Lee Stelner, R. R. to school at Potsdam. He believe that the ex-Kaiser and Beaito Mum Boardman, A. A. Gueffroy, H. A. lini are two of the greatest ruler of modem time. However, hi awg Gueffroy, B. F. Pound, C. A. Spra- Bastion for an American dictatorship may be treated in the light of a gue, F. D. Thlelsen, Charles Mc- Shavian joke, for an America at the mercy of a dictator would no longer Elhinney, Eric Butler, W. T. : be the America whose proudest beast is freedom. Bigelow'a friendship jenKS, K. J. HenariCKS, Cane AD- ! "raw nuer oi uennany waa rap rare a oy mi woria War, tne rams, W. L. Phillips, B. E. Slsson, JUm '"V"11 f Maiden laid on Germany's doorstep in a C. E. Wilson, W. H. Dancy and KuenzPs Knee Operation Successful; Rue Leaves -For School . . ' - t WALDO HILLS, Sept. II Hop picking in the Evergreen district was finished Tuesday. This dis trict is n?n known for its numer ous yards and the splendid quality of hops raised. ' This year's crop falls below the average, however, but price are slightly better. Ed son Kuenzl is at the R. H. Henich home for a knee opera tion. He Injured the muscle in his knee and for is time his doe- tor feared the young man would' lose his leg. : Virginia Scriber, who spent last year in Washington going to school is now at the home of Mrs. G. Harris Thompson on the Gar den road and is attending Silver- ton high where she Is a junior. ' Le Roy Rue left Tnesdar noon for Minneapolis to enter - Augs burg Seminary here he will take a three year3 theological course. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Whidden. who live on the Mrs. Delia Cook Place, left Saturday morning ac companied by Mr. Whldden's aunt Mrs. S. J. Comrtock of Silverton for Yakima. Wn. Mr. Whidden and Mrs. Com stock will return this week but Mrs. Whidden will stay in the northern city where she will' represent a dress com pany for a few weeks. Not a good five-cent cigar, but a leader of the calibre of Italy's Daw la what this country needs just now, according to the sage of Malden-on- Hudson. N. Y.. otherwise Pocltney Btcelow. author, historian aed hril. liaat controversialist, who recently, celebrated his 77th birthday. Mr. 53 Years of Wedded Life Celebrated Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Cummins of Monmouth celebrated their 53rd wedding an niversary at their, home Monday. They were married Sept. 16, 1879, in The Dalles, and made their first home on a farm near that city. On Feb. 15. 1898 the date the battleship Maine was blown up in Havana . harbor Mr.. Cummins sold their farm, and they soon set C. A. Howard. ; Lions Barkley Newman, chair man, R. W. Niles, Ralph Kletz Ing, Kenneth Brandon, Eugene Grabenhorst. E. J. Donnell, Mon roe S. Cheek, W. R. Newmyer. C. A. Vibbert, A. S. Johnson; al ternates, Oscar Olson, James Humphreys, Dr. George Lewis, John Marr, Harry Scott and Per cy Blundell. book which he authored in 1925. entitled "Seventr Summers." The as. '. Kaiser issued a vigorous denial of Bifeiow'e charges from his retreat at Doom, Holland, and in 1930 the school friends were reunited whea Bigelow visited the exiled ruler and helped him saw hi loin. IncMea ; tally, Bigelow is confident that the HoheaaoUeme will be back at the j. head of German affair la the a)tvr sf Utile? ; '' -' ' " :-; l - I ' Y-' '' i-V'j t - - -v: :.r :"- r fln .::::?:..;.;;::: .wiirliMn jc K : An investigator is shown examin ing the concrete crypt where the body of Mrs. Edith du Bo is was found in the Summer home of her husband near Great Herring Pond, Plymouth, Mass. The discovery was made just few hours after her husband, Charles E. du Bois, New York Jeweler, had fatally shot himself in Quincr. Mass. spent his childhood at Kings Val ley in Polk county. At an early age he began driving a freight team, and during the Indian up risings freighted merchandise from valley points to eastern Ore gon forts. IEGIDII HUXIIW -. -- r : --- .- .. .. ' .r V STAYTON, Sept. 21 Members of the Staytoa Legion Auxiliary went' up to Lyons Monday night where they were entertained at the home ef Mrsl Thelma Surry. Those going from here were Mes damee Flossie Pounds, Eva Hum phreys, Katie Etzel, Evelyn Jor dan, ' Crystal Miller, Florence Adams and 'Thesa ' Duncan. Be sides the hostess,' others present were Mrs. Ida Fleetwood. If ill City, and Mrs. Beatric Hyatt, and Bertha Allen, Lyons. . Mrs. Eva Humphreys gave a report from the National con vention, where she went as dele gate. The organization also elec ted officers for the coming year as. follows: Bertha Allen. .presi dent; Ida Fleetwood, first vice president; Thesa Duncan, second vice' president; Beatrice Hyatt, secretary; Thelma . Surry, treas-? nrer and Florence Adams, chap lain. Officers will be installed at the next regular meeting the second Monday In October. The installa tion will be held at the Commun ity club house here and it is hoped that Mrs. Dorothy Akin, of Dal las may be able to attend as ln stallating officer. The remainder of the evening was spent tying a quilt. Each member had made a block of pas tel shades of print, ajid these blocks had been set together with rose and white, making a very pleasant combination. This quilt, along with two others the local auxiliary will make, will be sent to Portland, for distribution to needy ex-veterans families. COURT I S HI ACT, EXPENSE ITEM I Grains Run Beyondl931; Still Coming tee, winter was discussed. Word has been received here of Polk county, and since 1908 have the birth of a son to Mr. and Mrs. "Ted at Monmouth I V ff a.l wa- V. B. Hlgbee of Tillamook. He has - a been nam n.tht Mr w-w PT Hawn, a daughter of Mr. was professor of thef old River view high school many years ago, MONMOUTH, Sept. 21 "Grain still rolling into the Monmouth Cooperative warehouse, and is running over the 1931 intake," says F. E. Murdock warehouse manager. "By the last of August The state supreme court yes-1 we doubted that our tonnage this terday refused to assume origin- year would equal that of last sea- al Jurisdiction of the filing of son, but a tremendous amount of candidate's expense accounts and grain has been delivered ' since publication of the voters' pamph- Sept. 1. In fact the harvest has let in the city of Portland. dragged unusually this year." . The request was made by John i Wheat is about equalling the H. Lewis, candidate for city com- 1931 crop here, with 30,000 bush- mlssloner of Portland, who said j els already in storage. White he had been advised that George I oats are equal to the amount har R. Funk, auditor, would refuse vested last year: but gray oats to accept his expense account or tare short, both in quantity and his argument for publication in-liQuallty.' However, the vetch har- tbe pamphlet. vest is double' that of 1931, and Lewis declared that while the I that helped to even up the Portland city charter provides t tonnage score, and even lap it that expense accounts shall be lover last year's record. filed by candidates for eity office, I .The season seems to have been ucn a pracuce nas noi oeen ioi- I favorable for corn, with many lowed In the past. I farmers reporting small fields of me supreme court suggested excellent ' production which is that Lewis launch' a mandamus j ripening evenly. Potatoes are not proceeding in the eircuit court rfcelieved to be holdlnr their own which was in a better position to this year for quantity. Some lo- xpeaiie me proceeding tnan the cal . growers report rather mea supreme court. ger returns throughout thia sec tlon. Opening Deer' . Season Draws Males of Sliver o m mm STIVER, Sept. 21. Mrs. Clar ence Ritchey is carrying mail out of Suver this week while Harry Kester is deer hunting. LAMBS: KILL FORTY RIVERVIEW, Sept. 21. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Struckmeier of LAoya Flicklnger and son Alford I Tillamook are here on their ranch Have also gone on a deer hunt. I to harvest and dry their prune airs. Anna Brown returnea I erop. They have about 40 persons nome bunaay alter a week's visit I employed. with her son Earl Brown and fam- Dogs made a raid on A. Nelson's lly. of Airlie. Mrs. Kather-ine Foxe sheep last week, killing and crip ot Keeno' spent a few days with pling about 50 lambs. ner parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilmot The Farmers' Union met Satur- Kester, near Here. day night with the Fred Sommer Doris Conger and Jane Good- Harold Jteiley and Mrs. Anna Holt dale entered Oregon State college J families on the program commit at Corvallls Monday. They gradu- I tee. and the Frank ProkoD. Joe ated from Corvallls high school Prokop and William Gflkey fam- tasi term. lilies on the refreshments commit- BREAKS SILENCE WITH A BUGLE out for ROUthprn Orvrnn with a The purchase of feeds for team and wagon. After some changing about they settled in and Mrs. H. E. Hawn, was born in Yamhill county, Nov. 17, 1855 Miss Lucille Sommer started MlX jV... nd two school at Griggs station Monday brothers fought in the Indian wars with 11 pupils, and Mrs. Glenn JM "g;rSh S! SV?h Philllpi started the Mountain III . View school, also with 11 pupils. enn "d moneT then had The Riverview and Oakview 8m" pu"b!lng power- schools also opened Monday with ,K a??rZ 7 . -. 25. 1847,' in Piatt county. Mo.. auu crusea me plains wun nis parents when five years old. He Farmers9 Union To Query List Oi Candidates MARIAN, Sept. 21 At the meeting of the Marian Farmers union Friday night a motion was made and carried to send-out a questionnaire to each candidate seeking office in November. A good many from Marian union attended the West Stayton festival Saturday. The one feature of the Marlon booth attracting the most attention was the large hornets nest, procured and pre sented by Carl Olson. The Marian school opened Sept. 19 with an enrollment of 4 pu pils. This is a larger number than last year, and should this number be Increased as the school year advances, another teacher will be added. HI WINS BULL Family Reunion Held at Pioneer; Prune Pick is On PIONEER. Sept. 21. There was a family gathering at the John Keller home Sunday in hon or of a daughter. Mrs. L. E. An derson and children, who have been visiting the past two months from Walla Walla. Mr. Anderson came Sunday to get his family. Those who attonded the affair were Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Schnei der and daughters of Dallas, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Frakes of Airlie and Mr. and Mrs. John Keller and family of Pioneer. Almost everyone Is busy with the prunes this week. The Domas chofsky and Curtlis dryers are running full force. Among others who have orchards are Roy Black, Roy Bird, Clyde Robbins, Will Klnlon, Ray Slater, Frank Dorn hecker, Lawrence Dornhecker. Mark Blodgett, Phillip Thiess, C. Domaschofsky, C. E. Cooper, Lew Plummer, Frank Dornhecker, G. L. McBee and George Curtiss. V - S - : ... ' 7nfle conducting the famous Investigation into the city foxernment ef New York, Judge Samuel Seabury proved he knew his way about. But in London it is a different matter and the Grand Inquisitor most aak directions from a Lun'on bobby. The Judge, who waa primarily responsi ble for the resignation of Mayor Walker, denied he intended to run for the office vacated by the popular Jimmy. Enrollment at High School is 1316; Growing Senior high school registration Jumped to 1316 yesterday, the first day of regular classes. Prin cipal Fred Wolf announced. That still more students will en roll is expected because the principal holds 230 registration cards made out by students who have not yet appeared at the school. Enrollment at Leslie Junior high yesterday reached 403, 20 more than on the first day of school. Reports from other schools were not to be made to the superintendent until tomorrow. baby girl, born Saturday night. The baby has been named Jean nette Marie. WEST STAYTON. Sept. 2fc Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Snyder of Aumsville are the parents of a Wrong again! THERE WERE.. W Blessed Events la Woodbara yetteraay. (tknt eaters fer Haseara) teaerrew tatrelTee 4. A1YIN ROBERT! (TU't Qmp KtyMt Pmftr) BY BUS Now much fitter schedules y fewer stops low fares rrrry iy Ash about new, buffet comfort service oa .through buses. SAMPLE ROUND TRIPS SAN FRANCISCO$18.00 LOS ANGELES 26.70 DEPOT Xew Senator Hotel Phone 4151 BHaeaeaaaaaaaweaw i i ' r;r 'rr- fw 'xfijtvr ' - ' ft' Xv-v THE JUNGLE f :r: ,:. 'iPKM V J "A -?i -iufrtralbythe f; I 4)U ' ' tt.Vl the leoM hi X T ' y ' ' s ' ' . - , - , N x , 1"--' m,, i f ' S - , ' s-naXvn-' , ' ' - jJifc.wJA.ft.v...i. .JtJM-JLiyM,.ii n,i ?,. i..,. ., tlJ....i..1t w ,v .......x,k - s. - Til n WALDO HILLS. Sept. 21 John W. Hanna, dairyman of the Ever green district, engaged in a bull fight a few days ago that called forth no protests, was given no advance publicity, but which he feels sure would entitle him to a prominent place on the state fair program. Mr. Hanna had just arrived home from Salem when he heard the frightened screams of his two young visiting nieces. On locating the children he saw his 27-months- old son, Ronald, forced against the side of the barn by a young bull. Running to the scene he caught the animal by the horns but was thrown to the ground. Jumping to his feet he kicked at the animal, driving it far enough back to reach a large stick with which he drove it oft until he could climb the fence with the child. At no time did the little lad utter a cry, seeming to be paralyz ed. While badly bruised and suf fering a few cuts, Ronald is as happy as ever. O Z j : O fa, fiaOTIS09RSyaB!l ' " - ' ' ". i vkvaftyf rtTvanii aia n aaeasaiaiMii n i 1 1 ii i i . . - - eeaftSMandaavxj --WMfc-s1aWf Tooting his horn as loud as anyone else, former Governor Alfred E. Smith, of New York, is shown as he entered into the spirit of the thine at Coney Island's Mardi Gras. It was Fireman's Night, which accounts for Al's chapeao. Though still silent on his intentions regarding the com ing Presidential campaign, the "Happy Warrior" made plenty of noise .wjth. his Jittle trumpet. . VanCleaves to Move to Farm At Hayesville CENTRAL HOWELL, Sept 11 Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Van- Cleave have started their children Merle and Edris to school In the Hayesville tommunfty, where they own a small acreage to which they will move shortly. The Goplerud nlace where the VanCleave'a have lived for sev eral years will be occupied by air. ana Mrs. sannerud from Bend. Mr. and Mrs; Andrew Clark have bought a small acreage from r. steiren, Mrs. Clark's father. and have started building a home on it. San Francisco and back 0 a LOS ANGELES 033 Leave any day 16 day limit Good on fast trains in modern reclining chair cars. Also in tour-. Jst sleeping cars (overnight berth" as little as $LSO extra). Ont Way Tmrtt SAN FRANCISCO . $15 LOS ANGELES . ' f2 Oonthern Pacific A. P. NOTH, Agent - Passenger Depot, 13tb A Oak Tel. 4408 . Oei,UU, h VteAatslcea 1". ' , n and raw tobaccos have no place in cigarettes They arc not present in Luckies . . . the mildest cigarette you ever smoked WE buy the finest, the very finest tobaccos in all the world but that does not explain why folks everywhere regard Lucky Strike as the mildest cigarette. The fact is, we never overlook the truth that "Nature in the Raw is Seldom Mild" so these fine tobaccos, after proper aging and mellowing, are then given: the benefit of that Lucky Strike purifying process, described'by the words "It's toasted". That's why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such mild cigarettes, j -. That packa gificia : 44 7i man writ a letUr loot, prtacb a Utttr sermon, tr malt a httter must-trap than lis Ketgbhor, s&tti ' luiUbis boust in tbt woods, tit world tall male kattn path to ha doorx"1ALm WALDO EMZSSON. Does not this explain the world-wide acceptance and approval of Lucky Strike? - - ' ' "-a a