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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1935)
. I- Aurora JUS Has94Ndmes 16 Tables Are Filled For '500' Party Given by Women AURORA, Not. 7 Taking of the school census for this district has been completed. The clerk re ports a total of 94, 53 boys and 41 Rlrls. The Aurora Woman's club gaTe a card party Saturday' night, six teen tables of M50O" were In play. Sandwiches, cake and cof fee were Berved. High scores went to Mrs. B. W. Stomer and Dr. P. C. Renfrew and -consolation to Mrs. Robert Armstrong and Mr. G. Church." Qow Attacks Boy Frank McAlistr jr., was at tacked by a cow Wednesday er ening and was struck in the face by a horn so that It was neces sary to take several stitches. The cow, which has a young calf, be came Infuriated when the boy and his dog entered the' stall. TaeAurora grade school tare a Hallowe'en program Friday after noon. Each grade was represented by several numbers. . After, the Grandpop says I'm a little pig, I guess that's why I'm getting big. Youne Mother Habbard. Annual November Canned Goods SALE Buy Note and Save! Here're a Few Items Picked at Random . Come in and Look 'Em Over REAL BARGAINS Peaches, Del Monte, No. 2y2 cans Pears, Del Monte. No. 2Vx cans . Pineapple, Dole, No. 2 Yt can Pineapple, Broken Slice No. 2 can i Grapefruit, .Fancy No. 2 can Green Beans, Cut, No. 2 can Corn, Golden, No. 2 can Peas, Sxtra Std No. 2 can Salmon, Fancy y2 -lb. flat can Salmon, Fancy 1-lb. flat can Tomato Juice, Fancy, tall can CANDY SPECIAL Fresh Hand-Made Fancy Chocolates Cherry Cordials, QQ 1-lb. box 00 C ; Polly, Little Assorted Chocolates, 1-lb. box 00 C Chocolate Mint ' Patties, 1-lb. box 33c VIKING COFFEE Good grade at a reason able price. "I A Economical, lb liC ... FREE MUG A blue sapphire mug with each package of Bisquick. Limited sur ply. order early! USE YOUR CREDIT DURING Salem Grednt Week Sponsored by SALEM CREDIT ASSOCIATION V 2, Home Owned MflRKT y Q65N.LIB6RTr umsm - 294 X. Commercial St. GROCERIES FEEDS EGGS The home of the famous JIodtjen-Brewster feed. Poultry men who on the profit aide of the ledger be one of the thrifty users! Hodgen-Brewster Egg-Producer, the Iodized feed, highest grade, 100 lbs. $2.30 H. B. Three Star Egg Mash,; milk, oil and greens. $1.95 100 lbs. Miik, . ori Matches, per t-box 11 S cans l . wwt carton ; - IDC Kerr., Hotcake, OQ " . . 10 lbs. J. OVC Purex(llmlt) r v 16c Crown Hotcftk Flour ', We Reserve the Right to Limit program the parents were lnrited to attend narties riven In ar room with Hallowe'en refresh ments served, rlday night the teachers gaTe a mixer la the school gymnasium. ( Give Card Party I Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Stoner en tertained with a Hallowe'en card party Wednesday night. Guests included Mr. 1 and Mrs. Arthur Kraus, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Gih breath and Mr. and Mrs. Geo, Wurster. Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Evans have had as their, house guests, her brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs, Andrew Schlappl of Auburn, CaJ. Mrs. Claude Moreland enter tained members of her bridge club Wednesday afternoon, guests included Mrs. r. C Renfrew, Mrs. John Kraus, ; Mrs. A. L.. Strick land, Mrs. 4 Frank McAllister, Mrs. P. O. Ottaway. Mrs. Lortn Giesey and Mrs. C. S. Calef. if Mrs.' George Kraus, who has been confined to her home be cause of Illness, has been im proving th past three days. . j Fire Only Vines j BRUSH CREEK, Not. 7. -L Brush Creek residents and others for miles around became worried Wednesday night by the big fire in the direction of the John Moe hophouse. Telephone calls re vealed that hopvlnes on the Moe nopranch were being burned. Lots of pure food will encourage the chil dren's growth. Deal ing here encourages your thrift sense. There are three other Big Advantages. We've got the fastest and most dependable free delivery service in Salem ... credit if you wish ... prompt, care ful attention to phone orders. 12 6 3 cans cans cans s 1.65 .83 .42 2.39 1.22 .$3 2.65 1.35 .69 2.45 1.25 .65 1.75 .89 .45 ,1.48 .75 .40 .95 .49 .25 1.20 .61 .31 1.35 .69 .35 1.49 .75 .39 2.45 1.25 .65 .95 .49 .25 Try Our Delicious -Home-Made Pies Large size, Mince, Ap- SHURE-FINE COFFEE The best money can buy, fresh roasted, ground to order. You will OCi, like it. Pb., only aCDC TURKEYS Henry Dome's White Fancy Fowls Hens, Frys, Bakes, Fresh Sea Foods, Salmon, Oy sters. Halibut, Crabs Home I Operated: GROGeRy fL I if mm& company H. B. Egg Producer ofi PeUetSj 100 lbs. $LOp H. B. Egg Producer with yeait added, an ideal feed for cold weather and moult $2.40 ing hens, 100 lbs. GROCERY PEPARTMENT Quantities ; The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, 1 " . WPA Staff of 34 Is Working Number of Ex-Relief Men and Women Obtaining i j Jobs Increasing An administrative force of 34 men and women la working in the third Oregon WPA district, for which Salem is headquarters, to speed ap the employment of 3734 eligible heads of families, a surrey here yesterday revealed. Thirty-one of them are employed: in the headquarters offices in the Chambers building. They face the task of adminis tering the works progress pro-' gram in eight counties Marion. Polk, Yamhill, Tillamook. Lin coln, Benton, Linn and Lane having an area of 12,282 square miles, a population' of 216,910 persons and 9000 miles of roads. As of November 1, 1186 of the eligible men and women were .at work on projects in one manner: or another connected with the torks progress administration al though only 365 of these were on actual WPA projects. Two hun dred sixty-one were with the for est service, 119 with the United States army engineers and 318 on contract projects such as the building of revetments along the Willamette river from Indepen dence to Springfield. Some Non-Public jobs One hundred twenty-three per sons eligible for WPA jobs had non-governmental employment on November 1. They remain eligi ble under the WPA should their present jobs run out. The payroll for the district ad ministrative force has not been divulged but it is estimated to be between 33000 and 33500 a month. The director receives 3225, his assistant 3200, five de partment heads 3175 each, five resident engineers 3150 each and the 22 other office employes from 354 up per month, it is under stood. Wages totaling 35742.24 were paid to 237 workmen in the eight counties on WPA projects between September 2 3 and Oc tober 31, it was reported at the district office yesterday. Between October 11 and- October 2 3457.13 wes paid out to 37 la borers on Marion county pro jects. These are the latest tabula tions made here by the finance department. Will Nearly Doable A check of projects yesterday showed 571 men and 23 women employed throughout the district. Officials believed 1077 men and 23 women would be at work by next Thursday. Forty-five pro jects were under way last Mon day while 25 were nearlng the starting point. Wage scales on WPA projects vary by counties. For Marion county the scale is 348 per month for unskilled labor, 355 for semi skilled, 370 for skilled and $77 for professional or technical po sitions. The working month con sists of four 30-hour weeks. Advanced Chorus Offers Operetta More than 50 Salem high school students, members of the advanc ed chorus or opera class, will pre sent "Riding Down the Sky", a numerous operetta depicting life in central America, in the high school auditorium the night of November 15, according to Lena Belle Tartar, director of music. A small admission fee will be charg ed. This operetta, the first to be presented since February, 1934. boasts the catchy rhythms and striking solor parts of the com poser, Geoffrey O'Hara, and of fers ample opportunity for the humerous makeup and ludicrous costuming that entertain a light opera audience. Miss Tartar says. The story Is of the romance of a Spanish senoiita and an Ameri can aviator. Need Inspectors f For School Jobs At least three and possibly four inspectors will be employed by the Salem school board, under a PWA regulation, to oversee the building projects to be started soon. Chair man waiter B. Mlnler said yester day. VPWA officials have advised there pe one inspector each on the Leslie junior high and the grade school locations and one or two on the senior high, school project. 'Identity of two men who have already applied for these jobs was withheld. The qualifications. Su perintendent Gaiser said, will be strict, specifying a thorough knowledge, backed by experience, In building contract'ing. The' board also will select one "clerk of the works" in fulfillment of another PWA requirement. Phone 8527 use H. B. feeds are always - Eastern Lire Oyster 95c Shell. 100 lbs. We bay eggs highest j cash prices paid at all - times yon get more'; ! in trade. C. W. Giant Bar Soap, 25c 5 bars Small White Beano, 39c 10 lbs. Delivery Charged, 0c Parent-Teachers Adopt School Bant As One of Big INDEPENDENCE, Not. 7E. T. Ellefson, 1 o e a 1 band leader, plans In conjunction with the parent-teacher association, to organ ize a grade school concert band. Tae P. T. A. has taken the school music as the chief project for the school year. They plan to raise 200 by different means. In the near future, to promote the band and orchestra work. t Ellefson stated in his talk to the P. T. A. Monday afternoon, that the Northwest is far behind the midwest and east in music and band work in the schools and Rotary Hears of People of Tihet "Roof of the World'' Has Little Culture Says Missionary Here M. C. Griebenow, dressed In the native costume of Tibet, told the Rotary club something of the life of Tibetans and of bis ex periences in coming out from the far Interior of China. For IS years he and his wife were sta tioned in Tibet near the Chinese border as missionary tor the Christian Missionary alliance. Their two children were born there. They were finally driven out by the raiding communists, coming out down the Yellow river on a raft, to railhead. At a Jap anese port their boy died, but they were shown extreme cour tesy by the Japanese ship officers in their bereavement. People of Tibet differ from Chinese in dress, language, race and religion. They lire on the "roof of the world." his home being at altitude 9300 feet. Wind and cold prevail. Among the classes are the sedentary, those who live in mud huts, and the nomads, or roving tribes. Anoth er classification is the priests, who are very numerous, and. the laity. The laity support the-1 lazy monks out of their poverty. The priests use their power to drain the last penny out of the people. Ways are Primitive A small bowl is the only eating utensil the natives hare. They drink tea made from a sort of brush; also a parched barley flour, Tak milk Is drunk. The natives endure their oppression because they are taught they are Poultry Dairy Fox Feeds Kompletelay, cwt. .$2.25 . 2.30 , 2.00 .1.95 K. K. Lay, cwt. Leader Mash, cwt. Scratch Feed, cwt. CASH FOR Delirered at our Cream Station 349 Ferry The Original Yellow Front Store, 135 N. Commercial Schaefer's Throat and Lung Balsam - will break up the most stubborn cough. 50C and Si OnTTTT A ir.ir.in LOWEST PRICES QUALITY MERCHANDISE DRUGS SUNDRIES REMEDIES I i Four-piece Men's Shaving Sets $1.00 Hot Water Bottles, Saturday Only $1.50 Magnifying Mirror, for Shaving 45c Rubber Gloves, Rough $1.00 Perfume Atomizers ..... 1 lb. Hersheyfl Milk Chocolate . 1 lb. Chocolate Cherries M 50c Haarlem Oil Capsules $1.00 Bisodol : 25c HilTs Cascara $1.25 Pet rolagar ... $1.25 Kreml Hair Tonic 50c Revelation Tooth Powder . $1.00 Junis Cream 50c BarbasoL tube $1.00 Mello Glo Face Powder 35c Hill's Nose Drops 50c Nature's Remedy 50c Ipana Tooth Paste -SOcIodent Tooth Paste 200 Sheet Kleenex 14c; 2 for $1.50 Takara $1.50Agarol ' 50c Mennen's Skin Bracer 50cPebeco . 60c California Syrup Figs 60e Mentholatum 40c Castoria 50c Hind's Lotion $1.00 Pepsodent, 16-oz. $1.25 Eno Salts $1.35 Lydia Pinkham Compound Friday Morning, November 8, if 1 Projects For Season communities. He states that with in a year he can take children with limited music work, and teach the band to play marches and simple overtures. if Mrs. Ellefson. local WPA teach er, has organized a dramatic class that meet in the Sloper hall ' sev eral nights a week. . She has out lined fire plays for this class to give, as finances from these plays must be used to benefit some or ganization ts. the community,! she has stated that the proceeds of these' plays may be used toward the band work. i I i i "born as the ox" so mus be docile. , Communism from Russia has done well in the soil of Chinese banditry. The student class Is soured on the Nanking gbfern ment and many of them are radi cal. The communist army drawn from the criminal classes j and bandits has been driven back by the national army. Chinese com munists control no provinces but hare Isolated communities.! They hare no organised program? and the old family unity of-China may be the rock on which communism in China will split Tell of Flight I To escape the communist arm ies the Greibenows and others left the Interior and traveled 700 miles down the Yellow river on a raft buoyed by 300 inflated goat skins. On a space 20 by 49 ft., their company of 11 adults and 12 children lived for 16 i days. They were often in danger when the raft was whirled against cliffs. They reached a railroad far in the Interior. It was the first their children had seen. j Mr. Greibenow spoke kindly of the Japanese. As to Japanese-Soviet relations he said the Japan ese are not the aggressors but are endeavoring to protect thelsmevea from Soviet Russia.' He is istay lng here with his family through the winter, and until conditions permit their return to the remote missionary post. i f Called by Death i : SILVERTON, Not. 7. Mrs. F. M. Evenson was called to Vic toria, B. C, early this week by the death of her mother i there. Miss Helen Dlckerson, who teach es in the Silverton Hills, has been spending nights with Miss I Jane Ann Evenson while her mother Is awy. I i KK Rabbit Feed cwt...$2.20 Angora Rabbit Feed. Kow Kandy Meal 80s.. Crown Calf Meal 25s.. 2.15 1.30 1.05 BUTTERFAT your Check the aasne day! ILEIS & SKf Phone 9418 illV ' i Drue; and Candy Special of Salem St. Phone 5197 Schaefer's Guaranteed Corn Remedy positively will relieve corns Quickly and surely or your money OKn refunded . . 40C .49c U21c iSSc Hps .. .U25c I49c iil9c iX29c U39e Lt59c ,15c .$1.00 -$1.00 J.34C ii67c jj-89cj Ji89C U.79c U79c I 1 29c: J ' . 1 59c ;., , 29c U.59C : U.19C L29d .39cj L31c 1935 Reciprocity on Lunber ls Hit Martin Protests Move to Lower Duty to Canada; Cites Industry Need Reciprocal negotiations with Canada, which wonld result In a reduction of the present duty on species of lumber manufactured In British Columbia, were protest ed Thursday by. Governor Martin In a letter sent to President Roosevelt. "Ton may not fully appreciate how vital the log in and lumber Industry is to the state of Ore son." Gorernor Martin's letter read. This industry ' employs more than 61 per cent of the wage earners in all industries and fur nishes more than 55 per cent of all industrial payrolls. iAds Ran Traffic "The industry also creates ap proximately half of all the rail road traffic originating in Ore gon and a still greater proportion of our out-bound ocean traffic Oregon has a rural population, not on. farms, of aome 240,000 peo ple, lirins; in scores of small com munities. "The logging of timber and manufacture of lumber constitutes the largest source of llTllhood for for the greater part of these peo ple. A blow at lumber is a body blow to the economic welfare of the entire state. I am reliably Informed that every thousand feet of lumber imported into the Uni ted States from British Columbia represents a loss of two days em ployment for an American work er in either Oregon or Washing ton." ' Gorernor Martin said that the lumber industry in Oregon was slowly climbing out from its ex treme depression of 19 S 2. "It impresses me as particularly unwise to subject the lumber in dustry of the Pacific northwest to its former competition from Brit ish Columbia under the present disparity in wages and working conditions," Gorernor Martin con tinued. "I belters that our lum ber industry has cooperated with your administration in efforts to restore employment and Increased wages. Cites Wage Boost "The settlement of workers de mands during the past summer IMF ' ' " ' '''' NOJV! Our Famous "TOPFLIGHT With "Nuerafr NoJilt Collar jAttachtdl Famous for their top quality nd now we have add4 Nucraft-no-wilt collars at the same low price I Man, what a shirt and what a value ! Plains, fancies whitesi lOl pr4frnir& fast cplorli 14 to 171 Buy them fiowl : 7' v has increased the , average vrage ot ;63 cents per hour in sawmills and logging camps and to 75 cents per hour in shingle mills. The 10 hour week is universally observed as a maximum. In British Colum bia the mills operate 48 - hour shifts under a , legal - maximum wage ot 25 cents per hour as con trasted with the 50 cents mini mum in the Pacific northwpst. Twenty-fire per cent of the work ers1 in any British Columbia mill I may, by law, be paid a minimum of 25 cents per hour, applied largely to orientals." Gorernor Martin said the situa tion was so serious that it merits immediate attention. "I earnestly appeal to yoa to take such steps as may be neces sary to prevent a sacrifice of the lumber Industry in the Pacific northwest and its workers in the Canadian negotiations, Gorernor Martin concluded. C C Bnrcli Dies SWEGLE, Nor. 7. Roy Burch was called home Thursday from Tillamook, where he was working, by the sudden death of his fath er, C. C. Burch, who llred hear RIekrealL The elder Mr. Burch was well known in this commun ity" baring Ured on a farm here until a few years ago. - ! Best Quality meat at Lowest Prices at Hoffman's Uleat Market 150 N. Commercial Choice Beef Roast . Steaks, Rib or Sirloin Pork Roast . . . Pork Steak . Shortening . . . Mince Meat . Chickens, dressed and drawn j 25c Perfect, Full Fashioned Dns)sis They're Gay mode si pair They'll take loUof stretchy lnr . . . lots of kneeling- tool jTheyre plenty sturdy these Ring! ess Chiffons .-ra these Ring-lesa Semi-Scrv-a Ice weights! The new Fail) shades are just In suchj excitin&r ones as Tog-.p Aeorn, Beaver, Mouse and Otter.; Sizes 8Vfr to lOVil i it!? : . .f . ) i PAGE ELEVEN 4 BSBBBBBBBBSWSSBHBBBBBBSBMBSMBBSlHBlBSi Newman Speaker Toclay I For Credit Attociatioh i B. A. Newman, manager of the local : Montgomery Ward store, will address the Salem Credit as sociation this noon on ,; "Proper Method of Opening Accounts." Thr association, which meets in the club dining room of the Argo hotel is conducting a membership drire. Beware Coughs fron cozxsca colds That Hans On y 2lo fnfitrfrT bow many m4lcnf you bare tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial Irritation, you can get relief now with Crcormilxlori. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with, anything less than Creomul sion. which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mem branes as the germ-laden phlegm Is loosened and expelled. Eren If other remedies have failed, dont be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulslon and to refund your money If you are not satisfied wlt& results from the rery first bottle. Get Creomuhdon sighs now. (AdrJt Telephone 5563 .10c .15c e . . . 20c . . . . 10c . 10c, 2 for 19c . A lot for a littlel 7IJ1NNISLISTTIX Famous Ameskeag brand 1 Finest quality, bat krw-pricedl Trim military cellar or smart slipover styles! Siscs A-TX Fancy Broadcloth All the new fall and winter patterns and colors 1 Regu lar, notch, club collars, or slipover style! Elastic or draw string pants I " mm IBm tutu- pc inn