The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 08, 1932, Page 3, Image 3

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    PAGE THREE
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The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning, November 8, 1932
Exhibits of Antiques and Od
dities are of Interest
, t1 ; :At Macleay -
MACLEAY, Nov. 7- Despite
the stormy weather the seating
capacity of the ball was filled at
the annual booster and harvest
festival fair- meeting held Friday
night.! Dr. David B. Hill showed
hla interesting and instructive
views i of Oregon scenery and a
reel of comic pictures. The Bar
rick quartet including Dr. L. E.
BarrickyE. H. Leachy-Newell Wil
liams and John J. Morltz, fur
nished music.
Besides a display of fresh and
canned fruit, grain and vegetables
there were among other, things
beautiful hand: embroidery, band
made rugs and many antiques.
Mrs.' Stella Culver exhibited pets,
which Included a pair of chip
munks, two Buff Cochin bantam
roosters and two African ring-neck
doves; all of which created much
Interest. ' "" , '
' A. Bowen exhibited an unusu
ally large Indian, howl and pes til.
"J.'Amert, W. A. Jones, H. E. Mar
tin, F. Bowers and E. Tooker had
outstanding agricultural exhibits
and Mrs. A. Mader had a nice
display of canned fruit. Mrs. W. H.
Humphreys exhibited a child's
dress which was made by her
brother, George Ashby, and which
she and her sister Grace wore,
Mrs. Alice patton exhibited a
wooden jewel case brought across
the plains in 1847 and a baby cap,
also made in the '40s, and an
. apron equal to Joseph's coat of
many colors, woven In Central
America.
Mrs. J. F. Tekenburg exhibited
a hand made qnilt, some of the
pieces of which were over 110
years old. The material in the
quilt was all hand woven. Part of
the work on the quilt was done
by Mrs. Tekenburg's mother, Mrs
E. W. Hartley, and part by her
grandmother, Mrs. Joseph Hart
ley.
Mrs. Harry Phillips exhibited a
hand woven tapestry made by her
grandmother over 100 years ago
Mrs. M. M. Magee exhibited a long
baby dress worn by six of the D,
A. Harris children including her
self and also by her daughters;
and a baby shoe worn by her
daughters which was made from
the chamois skin underwear worn
in Alaska by W. J. Culver during
the gold rush.
Mrs. Mae Patton exhibited
hand embroidered hand made baby
aress made in Scotland about 76
years ago and given to her by
Mrs. H. Scott. Mrs. Patton also
exhibited a genuine Meerschaum
pipe brought across the plains by
ner grandfather, Preston Farrens
about 1848.
Mrs, H. E. Martin won the
large, squash donated by M. M
Magee. and Harry Phillips the
large pumpkin donated by H. E.
Martin in the guessing contest.
PRECINCT BOUNDARIES IN SALEM CHECK YOUR VOTING PLACE
COtM TY VOTUiG
PRECINCTS
'LIPSTICK RED
PARIS (AP) Lipstick red is
one of the smartest shades for the
moment. Sports coats and jackets
are often seen in the new bright
hue.
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FDR 4-H PRO JECTS
HATESYILLB. Not. 7 The
H boys and girls club have
organised Thursday with Miss Ed
na Fitta as club leader.
The boys are taking up home
cookery and have chosen as offi
cers: president, Lester Martin;
rice president, Frederick Ellis:
secretary, - Allen Smith. Other
members are Richard Batdori,
George Saito, Alfred Schroeder.
David Olson, John Reynolds, Mar
shall Chris top hereon, Hiroshi Shi-
shido, San Ishida, Toshime Saito,
Arthur Van Dannen.
The girls hare a sewing' club
with these officers: president,
Marcelle -Frey; . vice president,
Evelyn Eggen; secretary, Sachico
Furuyama. Other members are
Tukiko Furuyama, Vivian Wil
liams, Adelle Frey, Jean Stettler.
Betty C reen, Berniece Stammons,
Carmel Stupfel, Margaret Dixon,
Carol Stupfel, Evelyn Schroeder,
Beatrice Stammons, Alma Car-
row, Mary Itow.
The members will meet at the
homes of the club members on
Saturday afterno ns.
Official Voting Places in County,
For General Election, November 8
UBISH VOTES TO
HIT cons
m . cor.
rr"'IZ jr
LABISH CENTER, Nov. 7 At
the community club meeting held
Friday night at the schoolhouse,
the club decided to again hold the
contest Programs between the
men and women of the commun
ity.
Committees announced for the
December meeting include: .pro
gram, Mrs. W. R. Daugherty and
Mrs. Harry Lovre; refreshments,
Mrs. Guy Dow and O. G. Mc
Claughry. January committees
are: program, Emma McClaughry
and Frances Klampe; refresh
ments Harvey Aker and August
Harris.
The full house enjoyed a pro
gram presented by the Scotch kil
tie band of Salem which Included
demonstrations of the Highland
fling and sword dance.
AumsTllle
Aurora
Breltenbusb
Brooks
Butteville
Champoeg
Chemawa
Croisan
Donald -
Englewood
Fairfield
Fairgrounds
East Gervais
West Gerrais
Horeb
Central Howell
North Howell
East Hubbard
West Hubbard
Macleay
Marion
McKee
Mehama
Mill City
Monitor
East Mt. Angel
West Mt. Angel
Pritigle
Quinaby
Riverview
Rosedale .
Salem No. 1
Salem No. X
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
House. Mill City
secis
Professors Favor
3 - flour Exams
The faculty of Willamette uni
versity went on record at a meet
ing this week In favor of requir
ing a three hour written examina
ation of candidates for the Liberal
Arts degree, in addition to the two
hour oral examination now re
quired. It has not been definitely
decided whether to put this plan
Into effect immediately or wait
nntil next year. The written ex
amination would cover a general
field of study, while the oral ex
amination covers only the stu
dent's major field.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
Salem No.
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KENTUCKY BOUND
SCOTTS MILLS, Nor. 7 Mr.
and Mrs. H Cook of Powell
Butte, are visiting Mrs. Cook's
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
Coulson before leaving for Ken
tucky, where they will both teach
in a Bible school there.
East Salem
Salem Heights
St. Paul
Scollard
Scotts Mills
Shaw
Sidney
Silver Falls
North Silverton
South Silverton
East Silverton
West Silverton
Stayton
East Stayton
West Stayton
Sublimity
Turner
Victor Point
Waconda
Woodard
East Woodburn
West Woodburn
Hein'a Hall In Aumsvllle
I. O. O. F. - Hall In Aurora .
I. O. O. F. Hall
School House In Brooks
I. O. O. F. Hall in Butteville
Champoeg Memorial Building
M. W. A. Hall 1-2 mile west of Chemawa
Livealey Church at Roberta
Masonic Hill in Donald
Swegle-School House District No. 71
Fairfield Grange Hall
Hyesville School House en Pacific Highway North
City Hall, Gervais
J. V: Keppinger Home
I. O, O. F. Hall, Horeb
Central . Howell School House basement
North Howell Grange Hall
City Hall in Hubbard
Hovenden Building
Masonic Hall in Jefferson
Liberty Hall
Macleay Grange Hall
W. O. W. Hall in Marion
Belle Passl School House
Phlllipl's Hall in Mehama
Hammond Lumber Co.'s Opera
Lennon's Hall in Monitor
City Hall
Ficker Motor Co. Garage
Davidson's House on Pringle Road
.A. M. Anderson Warehouse
Riverside School at Orrille
Rosedale School House
Us B. Church. Corner 17th and Nebraska Sts.
1st floor Bungalow Christian Church, Corner 17th
. and Court Sts.
Tale Electric Laundry. 3S4 N. 21st street
Swedish Tabernaele, Corner Mill and 15th Sts.
Richmond School
Yew Park School
Fairgrounds Grocery Store, 2620 Portland Road
Jason Lee Church, corner Jefferson and Winter Sts.
Baptist Church, corner "D" and N. Cottage Ste.
Basement Salem Woman's Club Bldg., 480 N. Cot
tage Sts. ;
Hotel Senator on Court St.
Store Buildinug on City Camp Grounds, comer Oak
and Winter Sts.
E. Sherwood's residence, 787 Cross St.
Highland School
J. E. Krauger's Hop Basket Fctory, 1025 N. Com.
City Hall in Salem
Marion Garage, 235 S. Commercial St.
Leslie Hall, corner Myers and Commercial Sts.
East Entrance to Basement of Washington School
378 N. 223rd St.
Basement of Church of God, corner Hood A Cottag
697 North Capital St.
Court House
Basement Friends Church, corner Wash. A Com.
Rickey School House
Salem Heights Hall
K. C. Hall In St. Paul
Wengenroth's Store In West Woodburn
I. O. O. F. Building, Scotts Mills
Shaw Hall in Shaw
Grange Hall in Sidney
Church at Silver Falls
The Roundhouse
Evergreen School House
Council Chambers in Silverten
Knights of Pythias Hll
Murphy-Gardner Lumber Co. Office
Stayton Hall in Stayton
Commercial Club Hall in West Stayton
C. O. F. Hall In Sublimity
Masonic Hall in Turner
Victor Point School House
Britt Aspinwall's Garage In Waconda
Hullt School House In District No. 107
M. E. Church in Woodburn
City Hall in Woodburn
CLEVELAND VERY ILL
LIBBRTY. Nov. 7 Friends of
Mr. Homer Cleveland will be sorry
to learn that he hi in aerloua
condition at the home of i con,
Ray Cleveland.
WHAT
EMO
SAY
ABOUT
AMOIN D
ROOSEVELT
No Republican newspaper, no matter how impassioned its opposition to
the candidacy of Governor Roosevelt, no matter how strong its support of
President Hoover, has attacked the Democratic nominee & the language
used within the last six months by Mr. Hearst and these Democrats in de
nunciation of Franklin D. Roosevelt as a man, a citizen, a public official.
Mr. McAdoo, Mr. Elliott, Mr. Young and the others are willing to accept
any man as their leader, willing to place in the White House a man in whom
they have publicly stated and reiterated their distrust merely to win a po
litical contest for the Democratic party.
What do you think of all this? What is the deal?
Is Governor Roosevelt a different man than ho wa six months ago?
Why did these leading Democrats so suddenly change their minds?
Herein, interested readers will find ihat William Randolph Hearst, his
newspapers, and various prominent Democrats have had to say about Gov
ernor Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York In respect to his 1932 candidacy
for the presidency. 1
WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST and His Newspapers .
Commenting on the opinions of Eastern Democratic leaders relative to
. the Roosevelt candidacy:
They believe the nomination of Roosevelt would make certain the re-election
of President Hoover. Of the two men, they accord Hoover more credit for firm
ness of character, sincerity of conviction, honesty of political principle, and
superior administrative efficiency."
Again speaking of the Roosevelt pre-convention candidacy:
; The first decisive move to explode the Rooeevelt myth is bow under way . . .
Democratic leaden in the East, who refuse to be Impress 1 by Roosevelt preten
sions, hope that California will add another match to the flame. . . Men who are
in a position to appraise ttoosereltn equipment declare that his presidential
boom id a 'fake pure and simple. They know him for what ho is not, rather than
' what he ia. '- Instead of being a militant fighter of the Theodore Roosevelt type,
' ; - the New York leader know him to be timid, vacillating, evasive, unstable in
.. - mental processes and governed solely by expediency. .
-
Apparently referring to Gov. Roosevelt and Alfred E. Smith:
' T win .the presidency the Democrats must win the country and the com try
cannot be won by a nominee of Wall Street and Tammany. Both these factions
are discredited and no candidate bearing one or even both banners can hope to
carry the voters;w York is not the whole nation" . . V New York political iead
'ership. New York financial leadership and' New York business leadership have
' been discredited' H Mr. MeAdoe speaks for the entire nation as well as for the
i f, if
Democratic party when he says It Is not enongh to swap Washington for New
York The change must be absolnte."
Commenting on Gov. Roosevelt's sudden change of his views on foreign
affairs:
"Mr. Roosevelt . . . repudiated the League of Nations this year, but not the
League Co art . . . The Hearst papers accepted this repudiation as sincere or at
least opportune, but most of the press found it difficult to conceive how a gen
tleman who has been a fanatical friend of foreign nations all his political career,
could suddenly adopt the principles of George Washington and genuinely become
imbued with loyal American spirit Just on the eve of a presidential election . .
One would think the Democratic party had had enough experimenting in national
elections with either Mr. Smith or Mr. Roosevelt. Both have been calamitous as
candidates in national elections. . Mr. Roosevelt is concerned about the unknown
American man. He might as Well be concerned also about the American spirit,
which seems to be equally unknown to him. And he might become interested in
. the elemental principles of political economy which seem likewise to be unknown ,
to him. The unknown American man is not going to be beneficed by Mr.' Roose
velt's plan to put this country into foreign eompHeatiens by the trap door of the
League Court."
WILLIAM GIBBS MeADOO
Speaking at San Bernardino:
"It Is fatuous for the Democratic party to chase the New York rainbow and
in doing so lose the rest of the country . . . The Democratic party must keep out
of the New York political mess if it is to succeed this year . . . The people of
the United States have lost confidence in New York leadership. They don't be
lieve that Wall Street or Tammany Hall, or either of them, can lead this coun
try In the grave crisis now confronting the nation.
' Speaking at Long Beach:
M Judge Seabury continue on the trail of the Tammany tiger, and is bringing
to light the most startling revelations of graft and corruption among public
officials, and racketeering among criminal classes, that have ever been brought
; to public gaae. The people of New York realize that New York leadership has
been discredited and that the prevailing suspicion and prejudice against New
York is widespread and deeply grounded.. These conditions give the Democratic r.
party an extraordinary opportunity to .regain the confidence of the American '
. people, but it must nominate for the presidency a man whom Wall Street cannot
control whom . Tammany cannot dominate.
Speaking over the radio: ; ' r .
,Tammany has not announced which one of her -favorite sons," Roosevelt or
Smith, the tiger will champkm at Chicago. The bitter fight in which these two,
New Yorkers are engaged renders each of them unavailable for the nonainntionv . .
- .- U Paid Advertisementby Republican State CentrarOommiriee,'. . ' " L.t.Vv . "
, T. C. Elliott, Chairman, SiOMorgan Bldg Portland, Oregon. Hoover-Curtl Club. .-v..
Speaking over the radio;
"... We must appeal to the country with a candidate divorced from Tammany
Hall, from New York feuds and animosities, and from conflicting ambitions of
favorite sons: a candidate removed, also, from Wall Street, big business, big
finance ..."
JOHN B. ELLIOTT, now manager of the Roosevelt-Garner-McAdoo cam
paign in Southern California:
'Ia New York everyone knows that Roosevelt is with Tammany . . , That
this Is true is shown by the scathing indictment of the Governor's record mads
recently by Dr. Stephen Wise . . . and Dr. John Haynes Holmes ... in an open
letter to the Governor. (Following are paragraphs from the Wise-Holmes let
ter to Governor Roosevelt as submitted to California voters by Mr. Elliott):
'Your record belies your boast that corruption in public affairs is abhorrent to
you. The Tammany brand is as clear on that brand as the stripes on a tiger ...
Never once in nil the monthe in which political disclosure has been piled on
political Disclosure of the unspeakable corruptions in New York have yon volun
tarily denounced those Tammany leaders who bold power in your party . . . On
the contrary, you constantly consort and consult with them.' "
MELTON K. YOUNG, former Democratic Candidate for Governor of CaH-
' fornia.
.--. j . .
Speaking over the radio:
"Democrats, beware that yon are not deceived by a specious plea, symbol or
name ... A candidate for president . . . must stand or fall on the record he
himself has made.' Genius is entirely too rare to often adorn the same name or
family, and an attempt to appropriate by name the renown of another is sure to
meet with, failure. So, Democrats, beware, beware that you do not cast your
votes for n name that will betaken away from yos as soon as the party to whom
. that name belongs makes war on us. It would be as far fetched to attribute to
Franklin D. the qualities of T. R. as it would to invest him with the attributes
of Benjamin Franklin.' j
DR. Z. T. 1IALABY, former Democratic State Chairman, and
MRS. NELLIE G. DONOHUE, Democratic National Committeewoman.
Statement:
What folly it would be, then, f or ns to pick n candidate from New .York . . .
Both Roosevelt and Smitb come front New York and both have the financial and
political background that the people Bo not want .'. .'
MAYOR FRANK HAGUE, of Jersey City, Eastern Democratic Leader.
' la a Newspaper Statement:
.' I am brought to the conclusion that he (Roosevelt) cannot carry a single
- state east of the Mississippi, and very few In the far West. The Democratic party
Baa a golden opprntuntty ; . . but for the party, at Shis time to select It weakest
. . cannot brtng the party success. . w
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