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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1933)
jc .f -..-. . ..--.a . , '..;'.. ,.!!? "u:::ru vir-- - jr Th OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning. September 10. 1333 Two Sllverton Teachers go To Klamath Falls; 0th . ers get Schools" ' . SILVERTON; Sept. With the 'approach of - autumn and school opening, attention la be lnr focused on teachers going and coming. 'Miss Mary: Sinclair and Miss Dorothy Eberhart. two teachers who were hired for- the local schools, have resigned and accepted contracts at Klamath I Falls. The two were receiving salaries or zui.so amonin lor their worts with the Sllverton hlsh school, and will , receive J 135 a month at Klamath Falls. Miss Esther Towa left Friday for Prairie City, eastern Oregon to begin her third year as teach-. er in the .first and second Miss' Olive Banks also left Fri day for Bonanza, Ore., to take up her work in. the music and English departments of the Bon anza high school. . . Miss Bertha Aim has left for Wallowa where she will - teach music, French and home eeon omlcs In the high school there. Her school opens Monday-. ' Miss Edna Spenker' and Miss Eleanor Wharton.-"poth of whom taught In, toe Sllverton schools during the past year win teach at L.Crande and at Oregon City, respectively; Miss Ruby Peterson has gone to Park Rose, at Portland to be gin her fifth year as a teacher, Marl Woods, former Sllverton youth, is principal of the Park Row school. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wells, former Sllverton teachers, have written - Sllverton friends that they are now in Paris, where Mr. Wells is attending the University of Sorbonne. They left Sllverton shortly after the close of the school year,, driving in their au tomobile to North Adams, Massa chusetts where they visited Mr. Wells' father, and left there Aug ust S for Paris. Miss Alma Halversen has gone, to Bend, where she . will again teach. Miss Helen Ellen son, who formerly taught here and who has been spending the summer at Portland, has also re turned to end to teach. Miss Cora Gopierud, who has spent the summer with her mo ther at Sllverton, has returned to Chambers Prairie, Washington to teach. Miss Orpha Nofsker is leaving this weekend to teach at Mitch ell. Oregon. She will teach Eng lish, geometry and general science there. F. J. Roubal, principal of the Sllverton Junior high school,, has returned to Sllverton after spend ing a time visiting his parents at Cleveland, Ohio. Reports of Mold In Silverton Hops SILVERTON .Sept. 9 Reports are coming into Sllverton to the effect that the recent rains have caused mold to set in in the yards. Some growers report that there is not sufficient mold in their yards to amount to anything. Oth ers report it in a more serious de gree. Picking 13 being rushed and many yards will be completed this week. Others will have an-! other week or 10 days' picking, j Cross -Word Puzzle Bj EUGENE : - -i 1" lr 1 iiiiniiiizii 39 1 37 3 3T HO " hi IllIIf I 7 . yffi n HORIZONTAL I mute 6 makes ' demand for 11 Goddess of discord - 12 an easy gait 1 toward . 15 poplar 17 father 16 eummit 20 eaten away ' 22 hastened 25 Ireland 25 routes rapidly 27 Cyprinoid fish 28 Grecian island ' 39 imposes as- a result 82 Anglo- , Saxon slava S4 elaa 85 closes again 88 remains 41 man's ' nicknama 42 pulls v 44 depend 45 fondle 4 puUie . storehouse -48 Japanese com' 49-rinter'a 51 inactive 53 Roman numeral eleven 54 medley . 6 sprout 58 acatUred 5 J ranr of action (pL) VEKTICAL -1 oVlared Herewith H the urday's puzzle. It iplcoit Wa:Right;pregotfs -immediate Future Will Be Rosy ! ' "" ' " ' ' ,' V ' -"' " v By D. H. Talmadge, Sage .of Salem - The state fair or 1133 has passed : Into history. It was the 79th of its line, and it will shine more brightly in history than some of its predecessors and less brightly than others. State fair history Is not a matter of books, other than , cash books- and ' the usual news records. The story of this fair, a has . been the story of former fairs and as will be the story- of fairs to come,-will he told by word of month. And it will be passed down from generation to generation, and will become one of a train of fegends, and even tually it will pass away as men and women pass away, one gen eration following another. It came to pass one warm af ternoon In the early days of this dect.de of grace that I drifted away from the crowds of the main plasa at the state fair grounds . with the Intention , of looking up a Berkshire swine fancier from Grants Pass, certain, of whose friends were friends of mine. The grounds about ' the live stock bernSi as well as the barna them selves, were almost deserted at that hour. I did not see the Grants Pass man. He had left his Berk- shires in charge of a young man nurse, who informed me that the boss had ' gone over to the race track. In the barn at the time were three other visitors besides myself. These other visitors were Ben Olcott, at that time governor of Oregon, and his two young sons. We four had the swine show, grunts and odors and everything, all to ourselves, and it was good. I recall one thing Governor Ol cott said to me that afternoon. "As is its state fair," he said "so is the state. Or as is the state so is its state fair, put it either way." Well, I learned during that hour that the governor. knew hogs. Ho found them interesting, not alone because of their value as an agricultural asset, but because and this I -merely suspect the animals were so suggestive In na ture of certain elements met with in politics. Personally, I was and am Interested in swine. It is the Iowa in my blood, I reckon. Swine women and song? Certainly not. I More than a score of Oregon state fairs have I attended, but never one at which politicians, as politicians and with political pur pose, were so noticeable by their absence. I heard NRA talk here and there on the grounds, but not one mention of party. The country for the moment is back of Pres ident Roosevelt. The president chances to be a democrat, bnt the present situation. Party lines are, for the present at least, non-existent. The fair did not suffer in any respect because of this. Dog days not hot dogs, but cold dogs meaning feet. Interesting the NRA code gov erning motion play advertising. "Good taste shall be the standard and the rule for all advertising and exploitation ot motion pic tures." Okay. Let it go at that. I recollect that a feud was once started in a Mississippi river town because two prominent citizens were unable to agree as to the con stituent elements of good taste. It has been for centuries the custom to place the sign of a busl SHEFFER 2 French article S period of time 4 river in EgTP 5 fersaer Russian f rulers 6 shuttinr 7 behold 8 mimie 9 for example ID remains upright 14 ripped 1 be dejected 17 bucket 19 heaps 21 go in 242aeenU4 2 mora rational 29 trap 81 water- surrounded land (pL) 83 eUUof being' ovenoyed 85 repulses. - 88 Paradise 87 aquatie bird ' 89 an oak 40 -miiip--'. solution to Sat thopes 47 Korael w ere-giassea icouoo.i liers r D. H. TALMADGE ness nouse aoove xno uour. ou it anneai to me that signs should ' m - . also be placed at the street level of a business house. The lumnago and stiff neck trade Is surely worth looking after. Deer season opens 'September 20. Am tempted to try making a Joke about hunters who mistake one another for deer and shoot one another, but the subject -Is lacking in Jocular inspiration, and anrwar the Joke is pretty well worn out. I wonder if deer have a sense of humor? George Arils is an ardent hu mane society worker. Followers of the Arllss drama would almost feel assurance of this without -be ing told. Also Mrs. Flske, whom we youngsters remember as Min nie Maddern, was a worker in the same cause as long as she lived Those Turner frogs at the-fair were certainly fine speclments, Modest, too. Didn't make a sound But back in the old puddles after the sun has gone down In a glory of gold and red and purple clouds sometimes spoken of as a "wet sunset," and raindrops were still sparkling on the trees, and balmy breeze was coming in from the south, what a tremendous bass those frogs could sing! Michigan has 424 airplanes and 817 pilots. MICKEY MOUSE XI MICKEY fox MICKEY I'LL I'LL LOSE MY HOME ; AND MINNIE! EXPECTING TO WIN THE 'BG RACE BY SCARING TANGLEFOOT, THEY fND THAT THE MORSE Suddenly SEEMS TO. BE DEAF THIMBLE THEATM we COULD TAKE OUR 8ASV N w f-t pvvj 5TEPrSDEi I USTEN.H.1T rUtt I (SOr) d ' T'1&Z22&A VaJOW: YOO SORE " ftKD beit it,bot we &WL0W5 J i. nV'pri wim so ' I 5QufRE.onTW6 button, ujItx seX'X S j: tSowt T8h ffi B SKSSTOtr. jw5 UTTLE ANNIE ROONEY tTliST A5 SOON AS WE. VvA3H THE T "PLEASElXDtsJ?rMlUD ABOUT rP H TaSHES-X'U. HURRy DOWN TO THE. . THE DISHES -XLL "DO'EAA IT irijTl A BANK AMD DEPOSIT ALLTHE MOWEV j J , SWELL AM? VOU KIN SET A "I 1 II I 1 HAVE IM THE CASH BOX --TH EN YDll BACK, FROM THE BANK 1 1 1 rAU amo uirs? pvikvc ATVvnr s rev wrcnor -rue roiirm I tilt t V v i w -r ...pimp w. . M i -hiii 3 m MMffMtaH Or-r-r -KOBBEg j T THAT5 START COMitf TO . S fgfeNM ft tV USTM,SOME- " . TOOTS AND CASPER WS.ITHQUrHT YC'J WER OUT IN TH ARD WITH CUTTCICU71 hs shouldnt ixftalonsout THSR2- ILLflBff - ..I .- .: r . . D At Least 12 Families Gain New Homes; Cleantng-up Program Going on ? " y " " ' 1 '' 71 SILVER TON, Sept 9 Autumn has really arrived at Sllverton. The city, ; as a whole is house cleaning. Streets are being swept and flushed. Gardeners are rak ing: early, leaves from the lawns. And people are moving, about. - Within the past 12 days, at least 13 move, have been made in the city. These Include: Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Rue moving from 25$ South Church street to the Inman apartments; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Hande, Sr., from the Word en apartments to 700 Oak street; Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Moore from 700 Oak street to the Harry Carson property at 608 Oak street; E. H. Oeder from 1011 South Water street, to 219 Mill street; Mr. and Mrs. Lester Green from 400 East Main street to the Eleanor Lais property at 012 Me- Claine street; the F. M. Powell family from 72 S Oak street to the M. P. Solberg property at 713 South Water street; Mr. and Mrs, R. A. McClanathan, Sr.. from 707 Oak street to 725 Oak street. New Water consumers since the first of the month Include O. W. Ramsower at 600 Oak street; C. G. Mort at 449 West Main street; Charles Hoyt at 121 Central street: F. W. AUender at 84 Barger street; Mrs. Minnie Fraz- er at 144 Flak street; Fred Laurey at 209 Brown street; John Bright who purchased property at 1357 South Water street; W. P. Scarth, recently arrived to become associ ated with the Scarth and Son feed mill, at 256 South Church street; Harold Davis, returned high school coach at 322 North Church street. Real estate men are urging people to recondition their vacant houses so that they are rentable "It is a task to find a rentable house at Sllverton at present." is the report. Ex-Husband Sues Dorothy Devore ; Claims Frameup LOS ANGELES, Sept. 9 (AP) A suit charging his former wife, Dorothy Devore, petite film actress, with inducing him to give her properties worth $100,000 under "false and fraudulent" rep resentations was filed Friday by IT - Starring Popeye WHY. CASPER I THOUGHT VOU WERS CaJTSUXl Xi GEE.. AW, GEE, MINNIE. )-- --I f an' T-T-TANGLEFOOT WILL V.I k E3,.N1 l."T P.A )'.- Il-I. A I-I-KNOW! VI ?s DON T CRY! 5 vl U G.GO Tb THE S-G-S-GLUE H l K Xu tVFWY . y w .www. .. , pACTORY BOO-HOOHOOOO! J--r IZiln RACE AINT LOST rftfit'Z? A BUTTERCUP HAS CRAWLED OUT IN ' ' THE STREET AND AN AUTOMOBILE. 15 COMING ' TrCt DRIVER I5NT J t nran.il. a. uwjranM4- Tortured i - '4: 1" - Six-year-old Spencer AHen, of -To-iAn o i bokiinr the chains and . tl :.V. I.T.V U. la .liamM his step-father. Fred Nahgen (in- utt. futmcd mm to me mu vbb f Ma itaiM and keoahim for three days without food. Hieogen is neia on $5,000 bond on a charge of tor sure ana negiect. A. W. Mather, importer, who .ask ed a revision of their property agreement and damages. . Mather charged Miss Devore had falsely accused him of mis conduct and had entered into i conspiracy with "another man" to wrest the property from Mather "for his and your mutual bene fit." Mather and the actress were divorced last August 6. - ' Pre-School Clinic Is Announced SILVERTON, Sept. 9 The first regular pre-school children's clinic of the autumn season will be held Tuesday afternoon at the Eugene Field building. Tubercu lin skin tests, toxoids, and vac cinations will be given. Physical examinations for school children will bo given after the opening of school, September 18. Herbert Simmons, ex-fox farm er of Bitter Root Valley, Mont., rode 24 winners in the first nine days of horse racing at Long acres, track near Seattle, Wash. Sticking to Now Showing "A An Uninrited Guest The Unknown Hero! I GTCP.CIVni.STCP! Flfflllllf m. sum SILVERTON, Sept. 9 The ocal campaign for consumers' pledges to support tho National Recovery Act was signed a p prox imately. .9 0 pexu f eat. JLal liaost one hundred per cent house-to-house canvass has been conducted daring the past si days,-Most of. tho signatures that ' Were not-ob tained were those, of people who were not r reached because - .they were awa from.: home- at the ttme the xanvas&era-. called. How ever, some amusing - Incidents were met with as in the case of one woman .who "wouldn't sign not because- she war opposed to 4 the plan but because she didn t want stifkersJ on her windows. H. B.'Lasham,' Sllverton Gen eral, of the NRA, announces that those who have ,not been reach ed by the canvass Just completed; may receive : their sticker of co operation by asking a NRA mer chant for pledge cards. - ; The groan of women conduct ing the campaign at Sllverton un der the chairmanship of Mrs.' J.' P. Ballantyne. consisted . of Mrs. Rolph Bentson, Miss" Murlal Bentson, Miss Elisabeth Keene, Miss Margaret Keene, Mist Blanche Hubba, Hiss Billie John son, Mrs.- G. B. Bentsdn,. Miss Deall Ballangrud, Mrs.- Scott Mc- Plke, Miss, Clarissa .Brager, Miss Louise Latham, Miss Shirley Evensong Mrfc-Xowell : BobUtt; Mrs. WOIIam Garver.f Mrs.. Fred Baker, Miss Hilda. J. OIseQ, Mrs. George Cusiter, Mrs. Ralph Lar son, Mrs. .L. G. McDonald, Mrs. Elmer , Johnson, -. .Mrs. Marlon Green. Mrs. John Wilson and Miss Merle Terry. - Earnings Small In Hop Fields ZENA, Sept. 9 An Unusual number of Zona persons are pick- 4 insr hona this antnmn. Keren fim. lIUes being represented in various uwvjmvs iu ruuL sua iimoiu counties. The rules for nicking are so stringent this year that those driving, to and from their work can make very little more than expenses. Baler Clips Off End of Finger SUVER, Sept. 9. Francis Smith- of Chehalis, Wash., brought his mother, Mrs. Stack, to her daughter's home here Wednesday, where she will spend a few weeks. Clarence Rite hey, while baling the Finish Hard Nut to Crack" f 1 WOWEST Z&ZOX PTEL GLAT ALLj PITT HER MONEY 04 THE.BAMKEVGq SIKICe T. SAW SOMEONE, PEEKH4 9 THEWPsJLXTW HOW Again there will be an "open house'! at the garden of Mr. and Mrs. Y. A. Goode of Stayton. Gar den lovers from all up and down the Willamette Talley have beeninvUed to attend Sunday' (todays T h e gardens will be opeK.Svt 1 0 o'c.lock "and, lights jare be- t n g , provided' for evening use. A Uttle fire win" be kept .burn"', ing in the out door ; fireplace. one of the new features, added ' during the past yearl y The last garden reception held at the Goode home was on September 12. 1931. At that time 1500 people called. As many are expected Sunday. There-are seven and a half acres la the' Goode gardens, the hops Wednesday got the end of one .-of ' his fingers on the right hand cut off. DHEErHUS DC L SEATTLE A total of 356 down. , and .operating mills which reported to the West Coast Lum bermen s association for. the. reek ending . September 2 produced 107,901,871. board feat of lumber. This was a decrease of approxi mately 4,5Q0,t)00 feet under the cut of the preceding week. The average week's production of this group of ; sawmills In 1933" has Kaon 11 TEO (11 fut- ilnHiir tin same period in 1932, their weekly: average was 63,862,639 feet. The new business reported last week by 198 mills Is 6Sf92,246 board feet against, a production of 96,511,562 feet and shipments of 101,662,091 feet. Their shipments were over production by 5.34 per cent and their current sales were under production by 29.45 per cent. The orders booked Isst week by this group of identical mills were over the preceding week by 1,551,009 reec or z.ss per cent. FIRST CHILD BORN KINGWOOD, Sept. 9 Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Coffel are parents of a daughter born Saturday, Sep tember 9 at a Salem hospital. This is the first child. .1; , ' 'fr.-... mi DUTPUT LUII V MONEYS GONE-T'YE J & I I 1 I w-.l -mT.'T" " SA. TESRS5LE TRAAEDV APPEARED IMV11NZNT WHEN SUDDENLY, FROM - NCpWHSSSPRANi A MAN WHO DARTED FORWARD AND SNATCHSD Trd HELPLESS aN5ANT FROM vy - gut.1 -rv.ti- uruMi mr rinwvnta DOES.YOUR ! GARDEN GROW? planting oft which was began. X 1 years ago. A portion of the acre- age is ; devoted to ' greenhouses, lath houses and nursery, rows. where seedlings and cuttings are started and tested out. Some of the seeds, Mr. and Mrs, Goode ex plain, hare taken over a year to germinate. There is a remarkable number of trees and shrubs which have been groom from cuttings. ' Annroxf mateir : four acres have been landscaped, and it is in these that the average visitor finds the greatest delight. In one corner. low English box hedge" borders bed of fragrant stocks and of as ters. There are pools with water lilies and. other aquatic plants. , There are rock gardens with their fine collection ' of alpine plants: There are lovely autumn-colored rudbecklas and there is an ex cellent example of what the com paratively new Guinea Gold Afri can marigold will do under proper conditions. The sweet-scented nic otiana clamors for attention along walks. Many of the large beds of Sensation penstemon, which at the garden opening, two years ago ac tually created the , -sensation" their name Implies, were lost in last winter's cold, but there is still a sufficient number to bring forth expressions of admiration from visitors. Deep maroon coreopsis. growing In the rockery, are worth noting. The little-known dsflemo dium shrub is Just .coining , into bloom. If yon ar$ hot acquainted with it look. It up at the water pool. IV well worth meeting. There, ft also a hydrangea tree at its best, A sunken garden has been add ed to the premises since the last opening, and this. In spite of Its newness carcely a year old is a Joy to visitors. Small table pines growing in the recesses of the sunken garden rockeries, the sparkling of little pools, including a cavern pool, the background of taller shrubs, all Join to make this pot particularly attractive. - A small-flowered, sweet-scented climatis clambers over a trellis. A pink-flowered locust and red we gilia still bear a few blossoms. There are garden -seats made of ledge stone. And winding in and about and around it all are flag stones, green grassy paths and in teresting red walks that remind us of description read of old country brick walks. In reality these red walks are made, Mrs. Goode tells us, from three parts cement to one of red oxide of iron. There is something applicable to every type of garden, and some thing of interest to every type of gardener. Mr. and Mrs. Goode say they are extending an Invitation to every garden lover to visit.thelr gardens Sunday, September 10. By WALT DISNEY By SEGAR By BARREL McCLURE By JIMMY MURPHY . Tin: " HALITE '. (fan ii -1 . "1 . 60 beveraffi 52 also 54 correlativs efeitlier. 55 We of Wight . (abbr.) 57 NoUry . Public -(abbr.)' ":' " ; 25? lot, Crtmt 9tku ffha ( enwtsMi uu. pm rue ii in Hia am :