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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1934)
, ' n..-1-i 4. -....... .4., , T, if if a r t 4 . I 4f . i I i ' V t k t 1 t f DEBT CERTIFICATES; HLESUSUI Open Bids jiext Monday; Jto Have tegal Opinion by Friday; Announced V' " Bid for the purchase of certifi cate of indebtedness, to run against future state liquor funds, will be opened here next Monday, Xlufus C. Holman, state treasurer, yesterday announced in letters sent to GoTernor Meier and P. J. Stadelman, secretary of state. The certificates will be Issued In amounts not exceeding $21 ,- 000 a month with a total author- lzed obligation of 11.250.000- Money derived from the sale of the certificates will "..be" used to match federal money for unem ployment relief. A resolution au thorising . the issuance of these certificates was adopted here July 20 and has- been signed by all - three members of the state board of control. Holman said the form of the certificates and advertisement for bids had been approved by the at torney general and that they would be Issued in denominations most attractive to the purchasers. The maturity date of the certifi cates has been set for January 1. 1936, but provision has been made whereby they can be retired ser- ' tally previous to that time in amounts to be determined by the board. None of the certificates can be retired prior to January 1, 1935. , The state treasurer declared that while, there had been some objection to the proposed interest rate of five per cent this had been ironed out satisfactorily to all concerned. The interest rate will be left open in the advertisement. Holman. said he had requested an opinion from Storey, Thoradyke. Palmer and Dodge, Boston bond attorneys, as to the Constitution ality of the law under which the certificates would be issued. This opinion should arrive In Salem not later than' Fridly Of this week. Holman said; Issuance of these certificates of Indebtedness was urged by the state relief committee, after word was received from Washington that the state of Oregon would be expected to share a more substan- tial part of tLe, unemployment re lief burden. Federal officials - made it plain that something would have to be lone by the state prior to September 1. S The rehearsal of the Jason Lee pageant orchestra had a good at tendance bust night, with several new membora, gome coming from as far awap as Dallas The inter est is growing, tinder the enthus iasm of thd able director, Alexan der Meioviaoff. The rehearsal is worth attending to see his su perb directing, to say nothing of the advantages of working under his fine spirit. There will be chorus practice this evenirg. at the chamber of commerce, at 8. A large crowd. is expected, tinder the direction of Dr. H. C. Epley. New people have been daily joining. This is en couraging, as the chorus and or chestra will make up the back bone of the pageant. ; Wednesday night, at the cham ber of commerce, the D. A. R. group will rehearse the "Spirit of 7 1" episode. : On Thursday night, same place and hour, will be rehearsal of the Indian parts. LICENSED TO ID Maturity outsprlnted youth Monday- in getting to .the county clerk's office to apply for mar riage licences. Leading was Thomas M. Scott, 81 years and seven months old, 11 OS rairxaount avenue, a farmer, who sought a permit to wed Mary Engle. 9. same address, a house keeper. This marriage will be the third for both. Next came Bahne Paulsen of Hubbard, 65, a clerk, for whom the three-day waiting period was -waived, so that he might marry Catherine Jackson of Seattle, S, a practical nurse. Each has been married once previously. J The third application of the day was made by Roy I. ' Hummel, 1790 North Capitol street. 29, carpenter, to wed Pearl Heacock, 21. same address, a housekeeper. It will be the f irstmaeagirrbxth It will be the first marriage tor each. - - n MIL ra ELDERLY COUPLES Reservists Back From Ft. Worden " - - Two aleu reserve army offi cer have returned and a third will be back within a few days from attending the 14-day train ing camp at Fort Worden, Wash., of -the 1 9th. Oregon coast artil lery. Lieutenant Colonel Miles McKey, ot Salem, commanding of ficer, la still at camp winding up encampment affairs. Those al ready returned are Lieutenants Ralph Si pp re 11 and Cecil Edwards. Thirty-eight officers participated . , fa the encampment at which in tensive training in all phases ot coast artillery service was undergone. . UNDERGOES OPERATION ' , SILVERTON, Aug. 11, Frank . Davis, attached to the CCO camp -near Cascadla, underwent an em ergency operation for appendicitis lere Sandsy morning at 2 o'clock. Mr. Davis is reported as recover ing . satisfactorily. . - Envoy Recalled ' , f ' 1 W ,: i Dr. Ksrth Riath ' Dr. Kurth Riefh, above, German minister te Austria, has been re called by his government for in tervening in Vienna's Nazi putsch without the consent of German authorities. Rieth assertedly coo ducted the negotiations which led to the end of the siege of the chancellery where Austrian of ficials had been .held .prisoners. CAUSE OF ARRESTS DALLAS, Aug. 20. Deputy Sheriffs Senter and Williams ar rested B. J. Reynolds, Elizabeth Reynolds and Dick Gage this morning at the Alluvial hop yard near Independence on a charge of disturbing the peace. The trio was given a hearing , in Indepen dence before Justice of the Peace Mcintosh and pleaded not guilty. Their trial was set for August 25 at Independence and they were released at their own recog nizance. Deputies Senter and Williams arrested W. Reddekopp and Jack Chaney Saturday for Tillamook county authorities on a charge of larceny. Reddekopp is out on $300 bail and Chaney is held in Tillamook county awaiting trial. Officer Ross of the state po lice arrested Louis Quigley, Clay ton Warner, Frank Quigley, Carl Rich and George Lefley at Cres weil last Saturday for Polk coun ty authorities. They are in the county jail here awaiting a hear ing on a petty larceny charge originating near Pedee. IS' ES Pmhatfi nroceedinss here yes terday included actions Involving the estates of two men recently killed in Marion county automo bile accidents. Nellie Main of Jefferson, the widow, was appointed administra trix of the estate of Jasper Lee Main, who was struck down on the highway in Jefferson by a Wash ington automobile driven by George Carpenter. Damage claims against Carpenter are listed as sole assets of the estate. In addi tion to the widow, there are sev en children listed as heirs. A claim for 8850 against the estate of Rockey Broacushlo, who was fatally injured in an auto crash north or Salem, was com promised at J350. Maybelle Bron cushio, a sister, agreed to the low er amount settling her claim, a stipulation tiled yesterday states, after another sister, Edith, threat ened to contest the claim. Highway Board Stands Pat on Funds Division The state highway commission will not recede voluntarily from its recent order allocating approx imately 17 per cent of the federal highway aid appropriation of 83. 100000 to Multnomah county, R. H. Baldock. sUte highway engi neer, declared Monday. He said the commission considered this a fair allocation of the federal ap propriation. Letter and teleerams have been sent to Washington protesting against the allocation and urging that Multnomah county's share be Increased. These protests were addressed to Thomas H. Mac Donald, director ot the United States bureau of roads, and were signed by George L. Raush, chair man of the so-called Portland- Multnomah county committee. Raush charged that Multnoman county has approximately 80 per cent ot Oregon's unemployed while it received onlr 1? ser cent of the total allocation to the state. Eighty Sent to Battle Midway Blaze, Yamhill ' Eighty men were sent to south ern Yamhill county Monday to fight the midway forest fire which has been in progress there ter more than a week. Lynn Crone- miller, state forester. Is directing the fire fighting operations. . The state forester said the fire started la aa old burn aad ha covered approximately 4000 acres. No merchantable timber had been destroyed up to late last night - . Cronemiller said no other ser ious' firM had been reported. WW DISORDER mm ww MS PROBATED SEEK ANWULWIEHT OF Theresia Becker Claims She Had Husband Already; 2 Ask Divorces Three suits to cancel marriage vows were Instituted . in circuit court here Monday. Theresia Becker started an ac tion to annul "a pretended mar riage contract" entered Into at Vancouver, Wash., in December. 1932, with Jack Miller. She claim the marriage was and Is void be cause she had a former husband then living. She requests the an nulment and "such relief as to the court seems just and equit able." Because Reuben O. Ecklond al legedly "heaped gross personal in dignities upon plaintiff and cruel and Inhuman treatment rendering her life extremely burdensome and compelling her to finally sep arate from him" in February, 1932, Eva R. Ecklond seeks a di vorce, custody of their one child, a boy, and support money. They were married in Polk county in June, 1930. She further charges that Ecklund after their marriage developed an "indolent, indiffer ent, quarrelsome disposition, re fused to properly care for plain tiff or attend to his employment and . used intoxicating liquors to excess" and struck and beat her. Desertion is the ground on which Fred L. Langenberg asks a divorce from Alice E. Langen berg, whom he married at Rose burg in 1917. He also asks that be be given custody of their son. POLLY AND HER MICKEY MOUSE f I SOT -HIM TRAINED BLOW ON A PAPEF? HORN I WANTA SEE WHAT HE WITH A REAL ON fS J: 'GOOD eCSENRy ROOM ?ttm( VER ROOM IS AS? JL V WILL YA, OIPPV THIMBLE THEATRE Starring Popeye POPY,MtSTR VVeAH, KNOW. KMTe StMb&t WLST HAWS) VANRPPLE HAS J I BEEN GOT HIM WfST NIGHT T- PJSAPPMTO7 LOOKJH POft. pNO THEY'LL XT A0.U 1 V- I HIM SHCE OF OS lOe'RE TFOOkSV t SOH-OP-I M TO STAN HEkE IK ( KErNRLV CRKCV vJAORTHERK XttJA J TROM UJQRRyiN LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY -vOu KJOvsf.veuttflEijr DOCTOR BET5A!UTwO BAWlr.BABy BUT SHE'S MaJTUL TlRLED Of WEAliJJNS TWTT Cfl5T.THAT VOU MAICE HER. WEAR. 1 1 TOOTS AND CASPER HELLO, CASPER! THIS IS DAN HOOPER! SOPBJB AMD 1 ARE COMWt CWER TO MXJR HOUSE, BUT DONTT TELL H5R THAT CXJR CAPE DGAUtS ALL C7r! ILL BREAK THE NEWS TO HER CT TH5 RICrHTTlMSt I tl Jk AMAM&l m -m sf m m t 3; ihX7miQm A. By LILLIK L. MADSEN 5; AS I HAYB wandered along the Ablqua, up Silver creek. Butte or the Sastlam during this summer, I notice more and more little summer homes being built log- cabins, little shake covered booses, boarded shacks. Some of these are placed in a cool, beat and suitable setting. They bring peace and look rest ful to the passing woodsman. Oth ers look as if a bundle of lumber had been dumped In -a brushy heap. There is nothing restful about them. Surely they bring no peace to their Inhabitants. So many people are spending two, three, often more, months In their summer cabins along the creek. It would take so little time or expense to make a restful woodland garden about the cabin. And by a 'woodland garden. I do not mean to suggest that one brings his delphiniums, or his phlox or his gladioli into the woods. Such belong in the town gardens, or at least in the coun try gardens where someone has time to care tor them. But if a day or two of the 3C5 of the year were used to clear up the surplus underbrush, to cut away a few dead limbs and to plant a few of the things that enjoy "going native," bow much more pleasant one's summer home can be. - I have in mind a summer home, used for that matter a good share of the entire year, far up the Ab PALS "TON AN LL DO T DON'T TELL HECAN :UpS HE CAN 1 I 1 ilh U 'OH,-WAH - H A-HA W ! HE'S JT-r S S. C , ( BLOW A HORN' I - vLmcncLA . KlLUN' ME ! AlNT NO REED VOn S THATS0NE V WTCHA MECAnVIi Sor.M,M TRAINED SVLLV (vjl SL N THAT HORN AN' HE . JUA f Al WAY TO MAKE V T AM SORRY THAT WE MUST SCVAE- -TIMES USE IM OUie. TR IS A BeWE UTTLE IRIL AMD SHE WOMT HAVE TO WAie "THAT MEAN ALT) CASTMUCH LONGER (sU 1 OM TOOTS. WATT UNTIL. tS OPEN FC3 CUSi:SS! ' PEOPLE. WttJL SWARM TO IT LIKE BEES VVSU. ALL, MAKE SO MUCH MONEY WE WONT, KNOW WHAT TO do wm i m lqua. The house Itself is very small and unpretentitloui a reg ular woodsman shack. But the two or three acres surrounding it are most delightful and. invit ing, no matter what time, of the year one see them. I have been there in the spring when red cur rant, trilliums, cyperpediums were la bloom. I have been there again in dogwood blossoming season. I hare seen . the so-called ocean spray ' blooming In the bit of woodland. Varieties of native lil ies bloom there. And there are many hinds of fern. Just recently. I noticed a clump of golden rod doing , very well on a little eleva tion back of the cabin. "Not very much work to It," the owners tell me. "We just plant thing which will care-for themselves and then we keep ex cessive underbrush down." At another little mountain sum mer home up along the Clacka mas, I saw big groups of sumachs. As this variety is not native here. I knew it must have been planted, but It looked perfectly at home. All along the Santlam I have found rhododendrons and azaleas growing around the mountain homes.- There are many varieties of both of these which are not native "but do very well when brought In and naturalised. The Mollis or Ghent, or the rustics azaleas all will do well in' these locations. . If you have no azal eas in your woodland garden, do not leave out the old azalea pon tics. Its blooms are exceedingly Flies in Saying It Now Showing Twixt Love and Dnty" TD LOOK-NO Sl&N OP 1 Ue FOR Mtt-Ei AWD MILCS-I BUT I OOT TO HUNT TILL illND HIM A Chick in "P0WEI2RJU R-EMEDlES EATME CUY BSTTSy Right Out KUMM-M " I THINK IT-L- ' TO CAME ; TURN ON THE 'RADIO AMD 6ET WES MIND CFFCPOUR CAFE IDEA i " I gsa3 fragrant "and ' 1U foliage I glor iously colored In autumn. - In one 11 title colony of cabins up aldng the Santlam, where I rambled Jn STime I found a eonsid erablejpT&nting of the red huckle berryT The berries were already ripe-ajid- were, unusually, large. The" bushes" were covered and looked very ornamental out-of- doorsv The-, red jam. which the cabin wife had made from some, wa just, as ornamental within the house. A Japanese maple or two will give color throughout the season, and when once started' does not demand attention. The best var ieties for woodland lots include acer palmatum atropurpureum, A. scolopenduf oliura purpureum and A. septemlobum. Viburnums are woodland plants which should be added. Among the best for the woodland home are V. carlesii, V. f ragrans and V. Opulus. It you use your cabin much In the winter and you fln the In doors Is too dark and dank from too many conifers about It re move a few and instead plant leafy trees. Or if tree are too few in the beginning, add some leafy ones to those you plant. The tulip trees, the silver birches. the linden there are many you caa use. And don't forget to add some lily bulbs. The BansoniL a yel low Korean species, likes partial snaae, as does also the yellow spe- ciosum known as HenryL This flowers in August, a decidedly favorable feature for the summer sojourner The sunset Illy, the Paryl and even the regal are among the lilies which will suc ceed in a forest garden Daffoldils may be planted In colonies In the woodland They are delightful beneath- a birch tree. Crocuses can also be plant ed under the trees, although the cabin owners, may not be In the woods sufficiently early In the season to see them in bloom the Ointment With Music OT SOSP046 I DON'T FWO HR-vANKlPPLE-MPWRE Hi DEW) R6HT NOW-Wrl&tL Jfc U. BLMTXC M6.0N kl BRhNci HirtTxwri Her "ShelT of the) Air "IP 1 wm . . t111 1 u K I -)! il f GLORiOSKX THATLL 6KAMUiT 1 VOLHRE NOT SUCH A SAO , ... u.. I rSi tl 1 SHE-.S SUCH A BWE.LL. LTTTLE S I I .KlD.xJLitZSELP. AfclMIE. BUT 1 V I 1 S-il I f fSl BE AS WELL At I- THE MLrStC -VOLI JUST LrTrEMETI cAmcAm FROM Ki CfC7 S KD- WHAT-O CAFE THEIR. SPECIALTY TH2 IS A NEW WSH MADE. OP SPArHETTI and hamburger. CALLED THS" BSRDrNEST MEArNr OP WNS HERS TONltrHTl FEATHER TOUR NEST SsmAc3H 8wf fMiw ittw pnwst Singer Coming - - - V ' s, i r - - - I , '4 Benlce Claire, famous prima don na of the stage and screen, will be presented fa person to 8a lent aadtences la October by the MacDowell club In another month, or at the most two, fall planting will be un derway. ' Now is the time to look over the situation, select the plac es to be planted and decide upon what to plant. Place your or ders early aad the growers will send theka out when you wish them. FIXED FOR NOLICE SE INDEPENDENCE, Aug. 20. H. B. Carney of Springfield - was brought before Justice Mcintosh's court Saturday morning by the state traffic police on the charge of driving an automobile without an ' operator's license. He was fined 91 and costs, and ordered to purchase a license. By rrrsnuLi; SOPHIE! A DOZEN TtSYVE GTCLCI THAT? v- ' is I - - 1 I A, - - ' J r - - ; -y - - ; '5 - y GEE. BUT OONCSV 7 X ' ' - X 7HY- I liTO MY OWN IDEA! O-CII-H! 8-21. SE OH FIOIiEEBFUElliWl Funeral services will be 'con ducted from the RIgdon chapel at 1:3 p. m. today for G- H. Tracy, 83, long prominent fuelt dealer in Salem and West Salem, who died at the Dallas hospital early Sun day morning after a brief Illness. Coming here In 19 OS, Mr. Tra cy purchased the land known as the Parrish addition, wnlch he improved and sold. For several years he made his home and main tained his fuel business on North Capitol street, later going to West Salem where he continued hi business. Gordon H. Tracy was born in Jackson county. Michigan. March 28, 1861. At the age of IS years he moved to Adams county, la.. where he met and married Alice Odell in 1871. He taught school, farmed and conducted a grocery store at various times until mov ing to Missoula, Mont., where he entered grocery business. .Survivors Include: two sons, J C. Tracy of Dallas and F. G. Tra cy of Cheyenne. Wyo.; two daughters, Mrs. EfOe Weiser of West Salem and Mrs. Merle Park er of Tacoma; eight grandchildren and three great grandchildren. CUXIC FOR CHILDREN , SILVERTON, Aug. 19. A health clinic for children who plan to enter school this autumn will be held at the city health cen ter Tuesday. Immunization may be had for the children upon re quest arrangement. This . is the first clinic to be held since June. CLIFF STERRETT A By WALT DISNEY By SEGAR T ByDARRELMcCLURE By JIMMY MURPHY DOKfT xET SORE.. - f COLONEL! YOUVEESENI WANTlNCf TO TELL SOPHIE AND NOW CZZX THATS OVER WTTH J ANTWV1 gfwit iiuiLrivsL lr ' n rrra XFk nil E!2ZZaZZS2Mt f h V M wniGi.Evst i n nn LIV