The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 04, 1933, Page 2, Image 2

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    t PAGE TWO
The OREGON STATESMAN," Satoa, ' Oregon. Friday Blorning. Angnst 4, 1933
Al Nye Suffers Fractures,
Moores HeId;G. W, Rice
Suffers Injuries
(CoatlntMd from pas 1)
en, whose operator's license bad
bat recently been retained to him
after earta; been suspended when
he pleaded guilty to a charge of
speeding, was arrested again yes
terday, this time on a charge of
reckless driving. . .
Other arrests and penalties
-yesterday were:
John Stark Erans, director of
men's choruses at University of
Oregon, $1 fine for failing to give
right of way to a pedestrian; John
Bushman. Oregon City, fined $1
for .falling to stop at a through
street; John Miller, route one,
reckless driving; Edgar King,
route six, fined $ S for passing an
other car on an intersection: Har
old Nagger, 1810 Center street,
operator's license suspended tor
five days when he admitted driv
ing recklessly; Arthur Green. $1
fine tor failing to give right of
way to a pedestrian.
tHogg Brothers
Store to Have
New Balconies
Considerable additional floor
display space will be available at
the showrooms of Hogg Brothers,
dealers in electrical goods here,
when three new balconies are
completed this week.
Remodeling at the store, locat
ed at 456 State street, will also
Include the rearrangement of the
stairway leading to the basement.
The firm, which moved into the
State street location early this
year, has found even the increas
ed floor space there insufficient
for best exhibition of the larger
Items of its trade, washing ma
chines, refrigerators and sewing
machines.
School Fund Held
Up by Clerk Delay
Not until county school clerks
file bonds as required by law will
the county school superintendent's
office remit any funds, it was an
nounced Thursday at the court
house. A number of districts are
having their allotted moneys held
ap by negligence of their clerks.
A. S per census child county
school fund payment was author
ized rn June and a $1.11 irreduc
ible school fund interest distribu
tion per census child payment was
authorised this week.
IVig Hits Coming Soon!
Lee Tracy in "Nuisance" "When Ladies Meet" with
Ann Harding and Robert Montgomery "Tugboat
Annie" with Wallace Beery and Marie Dressier
"Melody Cruise" "College Humor" "Midnight
Mary" "Storm at Daybreak."
WATCH FOR THEM
Today and
He was always on the make for dollars and dames 1
VW Dip
mi
A?) : 4
Mickey Mouse Matinee Saturday 1 p.m.
Tom Mix in "Hidden Gold"
The Gall
Board
By OLIVE M. DO A K
-CAPITOL
Friday Mae West in "She
Done Him Wrong."
. ELSIXORE .
Today--James Dunn In "The
Girl in 41" and Chic Sale
la "Whispering BUI."
Friday Edmund Lowe and
Nancy Carroll t- "I Love
That Man." Zasu Pitts In
"One Track Mind."
GRAND
Today Jeanette MacDonald
in "Let's Go Native."
Friday Tim McCoy In "Sil-
ent Men." .
HOLLYWOOD
Today Warren William in
"Employes Entrance-"
Friday Charles Starrett in
"Casey Jones."
STATE
Today Ben Lyons, Zasu
Pitts in "The Crooked
Circle."
Chorus girls ain't what they
used to be, Mae West has found.
No sir not by six inches and 20
pounds.
Miss West, authoress-actress
who is probably the most spectac
ular figure Broadway has known
in the past decade, discovered
that duriner the d reparation of her
first starring-plcture, "She Done
Him WronR." which comes to the
Elsinore theatre Saturday and
Sunday. .
"She Done Him Wrong" Is a
lusty, roaring melodrama of the
bowery, where men were men,
and where women were hefty.
Hefty. Miss West thinks, ts just
the word for it, for the average
bowery chorus girl of the gay
nineties period, her research dis
closed, weighed 130 pounds and
stood in the neighborhood of five
feet, nine inches tall. The present-day
chorine, on the other
hand, comes in 110-pound sizes,
and stands about five feet, three
inches high.
It required a great deal of time
and energy to locate enough girls
nf howerv DroDortlons in Holly
wood to appear In "She Done Him
Wrong." Some of them, in raet,
had to be padded!
"She Done Him Wrong" was
written, as well as acted, by Miss
West. She plays the role or "Lady
Lon' a beer-hall singer with a
host of male admirers, who pro
vide her with diamonds In return
for her favors. When Cary Grant
ostensibly the head of a neigh
boring mission, comes along, ne
fails to supply gems, dui ne aoes,
on the other hand, provide a ser
ies of startling events.
Saturday
mMsaBw W in
ED:.nn:3WVJE
CSSr.ARMSTCTCS
ZASU PITTS
lm Her Latest Comedy
"One Track Minds"
Starting Today I
nn
IMS
mt CHALLENGES
A DESPERATE
m .mj i mm mm ' j.
uwu wrwtiitc g
RUSTLERS TO J
CLEAR U1SMAUM Vi
aud wm THE i sill
"3 ..
m
COUIiC
DECIDES
OH WATER OFFER
(Continued from pago 1)
agreed upon, that the city would
offer "even more than we may
think tha plant is worth." McKay
pointed out that federal moneys
may be obtained at low rates, that
present construction prices are
low but are advancing, and that
time was the essence ot a favor
able deal. He also pointed out that
immediate agreement on the pur
chase of the plant and financing
of Its extension, would create
needed work.
The mayor did not state the
price he thought reasonable. He
said the earnings of the water
company would Justify an invest
ment ot $1,000,000 if an Individ
ual were purchasing the plant and
he pointed out that the water
company's officials held SI, 300,
000 had been invested in the prop
erty here.
McKay said he thought it lm
posible now to finance purchase
or construction of a water plant
here by an outright sale of Salem
bonds. He said' he thought the
bonds would not bring more than
87 per cent of par while the char
ter amendment providing for the
bonds made it necessary that the
bonds be sold for not less than
95 cents on the dollar.
'We must remember If we sell
our own bonds and are forced to
wait for prices on bonds to go up,
construction costs will go up al
so," McKay pointed out.
PI HIBH HONORS
(Continued from par 1)
to allow expansion by C. B. Mc
Cullough, chief engineer in the
highway department. McCallough
and state Highway Engineer R
H. Baldock were Introduced.
Speaking of the permanence of
the new structure, Mr. Scott de
clared:
'The Egyptians said 'all things
fear time but time tears the pyr
amids.' I say to you that time
fears this bridge: a permanent
bridge built of 4,000 yards ot con
crete, 319 tons of steel and using
one and a half million feet of
lumber and timber more timber
than If It had been built of
wood."
In response to opening word of
Mrs. Edna Allen, mayor of the
town of Jefferson, greetings from
neighboring cities on the south
and north were extended, re
spectively, by Mayor W. L. Jaek-
son of Albany and Mayor Douglas
McKay of Salem. Stelwer intro
duced McKay as a possible future
governor of Oregon.
Governor Meier was represent
ed on the program by Judge
Charles H. Carey, corporation
commissioner, who spoke In glow
Tomorrow
& Sunday
Continuous
2 to 11 P. M.
Doors Open
1:45
Bargain
Hour
2 to 3 p.m.
Any Scat
3 to 11 pan.
Any Scat 1AA
Kiddies JLUC
Comedy
GRANT
n moo at
noah etiajr
caster MDtAMo
OPEN
EVERY SAT. ft
SUN. EACH
WEEK
ra
HN
"YOU CAN 61 HAD!"
Packed Lew
She W ft s
Ne lady iW)
But SliaEfsiC
Knew What jk TJ
She Wanted! fC"
IHflic lilST
'ShG
Dono
k Him
, CAAYGRANT I
DnA4 OWIH MOORS I
J
ing terms of the pioneer whose
name the bridge bears. Jefferson
Myers of Portland, a 'former Sdo
resident who crossed oa Consers
ferry" as a boy. spoke,, touching
npon present' public finance prob
lems.
Senator Stelwer expressed nls
pleasure at being called back to
hi "home town" to preside for
the occasion.
- About 40 descendant of Jacob
Conser occupied a reserved sec
tion in the audience, and the fam
ily was also represented npon the
platform.
The program, arranged by a
committee of Jefferson residents
headed by Mrs. Karl Stelwer, was
amplified through courtesy ot the
Cherry City baking car and Gard
ner Knapp of Salem. -
TWO H ID FI
(Continued from page 1)
dation. Her husband and seven
children escaped.
Near the west entrance of the
royal gorge in southern Colora
do, the Arkansas river, swollen
by downpours in that section, was
out of its banks and .several miles
ot D. R. G. W. railroad tracks
were washed out.
Rock Island bridges .and track
were washed out by storms In
the Colorado Springs region and
in the Byers - Strasburg area.
Union Pacific tracks were washed
out. Water was eight feet deep
in Brighton buildings.
Crop losses over the flood sec
tors will be enormous and hun
dreds of head ot livestock were
drowned. Highways and bridges
were damaged heavily.
Deaths from the Castlewood
dam flood remained at two.
MEAT DEALERS OF
CITY ACCEPT CODE
(Continued from page 1)
mainlng open Sundays and legal
holidays.
Speakers included Ben Perlich,
president of the Eugene Retail
Meat Dealers' association, Ches
ter Goodman and B. W. Anderson
ot that organisation, and E. G.
Harlan, Eugene chamber of com
merce manager and secretary-
treasurer ot the Oregon Retail
Meat Dealers' association.
MO
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OfOB
New Super Shell without
former 3 cent premium
surprises western motorists
IT'S the tame out here. Hundreds of thou
sands have switched to Super ShelL
Hundreds oi thousands are telling their
friends about it
ALL WA$TC PARTS REMOVED
3 L lr
i r
1 1
SUPU SHELL IS H16HSA IN ANTI-KNOCK THAN
ANY OTHSa ASOUNS AT A NON-PREMIUM KUCS
GOAL STRIKE LIAY 1
BE SETTLED SDOIi
(Continued from page 1)
to be specific about their intima
tions that a basis for an agree
ment was near.
It was reported President Roos
evelt from Hyde Park had taken
a hand in the negotiations by tele
phone and was directing the linal
efforts to bring the conflicting
elements together . and end the
disturbance which has - lead to
bloodshed in the bituminous fields
of Pennsylvania.
In addition to Governor Pin-
chot, who flew here yesterday,
Johnson had called to his aid
members of the industrial advis
ory board of the administration
and they were understood to hare
urged npon officials of the United
States Steel corporation, which
controls the foremost mine in the
strike, to seek a basis tor settle
ment. -
After conferring here with
Thomas Moses, president of the
Frlck Coke company, tne sieei
company's subsidiary, Johnson
talked by telephone with W. A.
Irvin, president ot the steel corporation-.
in!
GuhcI's cciXiieJrtutcs never
der me E
SAfSASTf tkej
fTAirwo Mm
Mftgff S)4aVBSSnSftV WSBtSSl'ssl
5 eOMtl AITI that
5 aim-nioat tm-
nsecBS rasrs that
CoatolM
aa aiga
At SfccH
In Milk Prices
Here Forecast
t- ;
:,A two-cent Increase per quart
In! the price of milk to the con
sumer and of 80 cents! a hun
dredweight to the producer Is In
the off lug here. It was reported
yesterday. Salem distributors axe
expected to make the price chan
ges as soon as the milk code un
der the agricultural adjustment
act la. approved.
Low milk prices hare nearly
forced numerous producers in the
Salem mllkshed out of business.
J. K. Bllnkhorn. county dairy in
spector, reported. He said that
with costs ot hay and other feeds
increasing, a milk price advance
appeared the producers only sal-ration.
lrrffiS1
For Better
EYE
HEALTH
Ton may be sure that glasses
win be recommended and fit
ted only when necessary. And
the cost will be small.
I LIKE TO SMOKE A LOT,
ESPECIALLY AFTER A
GOOD SWIM. I HAVE
TRIED ALL POPULAR
BRANDS AND CAMELS
ARE MILDER ... IT U
MORE FUN TO KNOW I
They tell of better mileage they're getting
premium mileage.
They rave about the pick-up and surging
power from Super ShelL And how remarkably
it smooths out a motor's operation in traffio
and On the hills.
This new improved Super Shell gives you
premium performance better performance
than the East got in the old Super Shell at 3
extra per gallon.
Credit western ingenuity for developing such
a gasoline, without any of the" wasteful gassy
and sluggish parts mat cut the efficiency of
ordinary gasolines. A super gasoline at the
ordinary price t No wonder it's taking the en
tire country by storm.
HELL
Cka-benset, pare petreleaai
ta nukock sm
Service lac statleas ad Shell
Clear Weather
Today Forecast
v .
I
' Clearing weather for the week
end Is forecast by the weather
bureau following two e 1 o n d y
days on which traces of rain
fell. Rising temperature with de
creasing humidity is predicted for
Saturday.
Thursday's maximum .tempera
ture was 49, 11 degrees below
that of Wednesday.
Last Times Today
Matinee
Starts
DEN LYON
ZASU PITTS
GLEASON
PURCELL
J
1-15 j&fy
Night -J
Show . I.,.-
645 AM,
0
I- i fll JAMS
iJ? worn.
Xffl&
frb Selected
& Sil Short
Subjects
ast went
Thb LONGVIEVI
User Reports i
MI have used every kind
of gas but none of mem
ever put the pep into
my '25 Packard that
Super Shell does. And
it gives more mileage.'
D. J.N t smith,
Leariew Wsak
If
prod-
dealers
nincnESTEnsjpiLLS
. M 4 ttum Uu mm 4taU(C
r naiJ mUhiMmtMMi
1 mm tart. I. Mite. Umy Iwl
sCLS st fiawfiOTS STiaxwaug
lAJ O U E.YV0 O J
Today and tarda y
First Showing Salem
Double PrograiB
Also Out Cans; Comedy, News,
and Cartoon Comedy.
Back 'ones Ranger Clob Meets
Each Saturday at l:SO pjn.
Sunday Comes
for it
X.'- i
7
5 ;
jjf7 CHARLES iT
II STARRETT Ik.
r-s2?- RUTH HALL
YSUISHI toKir cumT - f
1 Or - r
II
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