Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 17, 1937)
.ivig:: eight Tit OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning. September 17, 1937 of the P. Lorillard company. blr tbbacco firm, died of a eart at tack' at a summer resort Hotel here tonight. " - - . Fall Program Launched at Y CCC Will Aid Flood Control Train Flagged by Lighting Matches When Auto Stalls Land Blocldiig Call Election MIDDLB GROVE A special 8 p. m. to fill the vacancy oaths school board caused by the resig Tobacco King Dies WHITEFIELD, N. H., Sept. 15 election willl be held in the Mid- nation of V. M. LaDue, according Issue Settled die Grove schoolhouse Sept. 23 at to call of Orton H. Hllfiker. clerk. -Benjamin L. Belt, president Aquatic alad Gym Classes Are Arranged ; Changed From Former Plan ' With the opening of Salem pub lic school last Monday and the announcement of freshman days and beginning: of classes at Wil lamette early next week, tha local TMCA swimming- and gym class program will be In fall swing be ginning the first of next week. Athletic Director Fred E. Smith said yesterday. For a better distribution, of class 'periods women's class days hare been changed from Wednesday and Friday to Tuesday aud Fri day. Classes will follow much the same general scheme as they did last year. A new class in the women's division is the tumbling las for girls Tuesday afternoons at J:40 o'clock. . Methods for keeping attendance -- records were cnanged recently and - the new attendance blanks are available for the opening of fall classes. Each member fills in a blank each, time he makes use of one of the TMCA facilities- Te complete, YMCA fall class schedule: X. -y; . L Mea ' Business " men: Gym class Monday; Wednesday and Friday at 5:S0. Varsity vollyball Tuesday and - Thursday at 5:30. Handball 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Noon class Tuesday and "Fri day, It to 1; Monday and Thurs day, 12 to 1. Learn to swim Monday and ' Thursday, 7 to 7:45. Social mixed swim For mem bers and their families, Friday, 7 to 7:45. 'Young men: YMD gym class Monday and Thursday, 8 to 9. Swimming Monday and Thurs day. 9 to 10. Social mixed swim Friday. 8:30 to 9:16- . Gymnastics Tuesday, 8 to 9. Handball 9 a.m. to 9. p.m. Special activities to all men (time to be arranged): Boxing, - wrestling, weight lifting, badmin ton, archery, swimming, individ ual exercise. Boys: Gym classes Swim fol lows all gym classes. Cadets Saturday, 8: SO to 9:15. Preps Thursday. 4 to 4:45. and Saturday, 9:25 to 10:15. Jr.. Hi Wednesday, 4 to 4:45. and Saturday, 10:25 to 11:15. ! HI school Monday and Thurs day, 1 to 8-. !, Tumbling and gymnastics . Monday and Friday, 4 to 5. Swim clubs: Beginner s Thursday, 4 to 4:45, and Satur day. 1 to 1:45. Tadpoles Wednesday, 4 to 4:45. t Minnow Monday, 4 to 4:45. Trout Monday, 4:45 to 5:25. 'i Sharks Wednesday, 7 to 7:45. Special activities (time to be arranged) Boxing, wrestling, varsity swimming, aquatic leaders club, gymnastic leaders club. Women Matrons: Gym class Tuesday and Friday. 9:15 to 10 a.m. Swimming Beginners, Tues day and Friday, 9:30 to 10:15 a.m.; advanced, Tuesday and Frij nay, jtv:ia 10 11 am. . Business girls: Gym class Tuesday and.Friday, 7 to 8 p.m. Swimming beginners Tuesday, 4:15 to 8 p.m.; advanced. Tues day, 8 to 9 p.m.; open swim, Fri day, 7:45 to 8:30 p.m. i Teachers: Swimming Tuesday and Friday, 6:15 to 7 p.m. : Special activities Time to be arranged Badminton, archery, handball. Girls: Tumbling Tuesday, 3:40 to 4:30. . Swimming Beginners, Tues day and .Friday, 3:45 to 4:15: grammar school, Tuesday and Fri day. 4:20 to 5; Jr. Hi and Hi school, Tuesday and Friday, 5:05 to 5:45; life saving, Tuesday, 6:45 to 6:15. - Revetment ork Begun at Dalles THE DALLES, Sept. J. A, Terteling, Boise contractor, began clearing brush along the . waterfront this week preparatory to starting the revetment project protecting The Dalles from Bon neville dam backwater. Cost of the revetment will be $142,050; The project, provides tor a pumping' plant to carry oft sewage when gravity flow fail to function at certain stages of tha river. i Salt Creek Falls Tunnel Approved EUGENE, Sept. 18--Gov-ernment approval of construction of a 1,000-foot tunnel on the Willamette highway project near Salt Creek falls was announced today by Willamette national forest: officials. .Tha work will be financed by 11 20; 000 from the Oregon foj est highway construction fund and $20,000 from the state high way , commission. - ' ' Tuna Run Will Continue 2 More Weeks, Forecast DEPOE BAY, S e p t, 18-;p)-Flshermen netted 4590 pounds of tuna last week and predicted the phenomenal run oft the Oregon coast ' will v continue two more weeks. Canneries are paying eight cents, although "over the counter' trade at resorts pays 19 to 28 cent. High Officials of Elks Visitor in Northwest PORTLAND, Sept 1 Charles Spencer Hart, . exalted ruler of the Elks lodge, visited Portland today en a tour of north west lodges. After vlaiting Wash ington points,! he will return Fri day to confer with deputy . rulers from' Oregon, Washington and Agreement With County Is Reached; Help on Oil Project Arranged A Marion county cooperative agreement with the CCC which will virtually complete the flood control project southeast of Sal em this fall was revealed yes terday after Coanty Commission ers Nelson and Hewlett, County Engineer Hubbs, William . Mcll wain from the county road de partment, and CCC headquar ters representatives bere had in vestigated the situation. Future flood damage from Mill creek and tributaries will be practically unknown if the plan works out, in the area southeast of Salem and the southeastern section of the city Itself. Under the scheme, the county will send its oil rocking crew to the CCC headquarters near the peniten tiary and put an oil rock surface on about 5000 feet of land owned by the government there. In re turn for this, the CCC will send equipment and men to complete the dike on -the east side of Mill creek from the bridge near the pen annex downstream. At pres ent, the stream bere is diked on only the west side, so the east ern lands have been subject to floods at high water seasons. The county and the Southern Pacific will also join in rocking the dike above the bridge at sharp turns where the force of the torrent has ripped diking away. Officials said yesterday that flood control projects in this area have been the signal for construction of new and bet ter i evidences there, and that completion of the project should bring material growth in that part of the city. Chinese Freed of Gambling Charge But Faces Perjury Count; Bennett Is Sued Over Raiding Activity PORTLAND, Sept. 10-(iP)-Ah Sing, Chinese, arrested on the first of the now locally famous gambling raids staged by City Commissioner James E. Bennett, waa acquitted in municipal court today of charges of possession of gambling apparatus. However, Acting Judge Frank Hilton ordered his arrest on a per jury charge, on the ground that an affidavit signd by the defend ant said he was the owner of the property involved, whereas he testified on the witness stand that he was merely a caretaker. Larry Chin, another Chinese, filed suit against Bennett for $1000 as the result of the alleged destruction of a door during a raid. The complaint charged that the raiders, led by Bennett, visited Chin's home during the absence of himself and h i s family and smashed a plate glass door to gain entrance. Following Ah Sing's acquittal, Bennett prepared a statement for the press assailing "jurors who lean over backward in their en deavor to give the law violator the benefit of the doubt." Bonds Rehoudit By Water Board Rebought bonds, by the Salem water commission, now total $67,- 000,- since $12,000 worth were repurchased yesterday of the lat est $100,000 issue of City of Sa lem water bonds that brokers re ceived September 14. The bonds ill apply to meeting 1942 ma turities of city water bonds. Acting on the commissions pol icy to reduce interest costs to the smallest possible. $7000 of the amount used was taken from the customers' deposit fund on which the commission pays interest of 1 Per cent, and $5000 came from the department sinking fund. The bonds bear Interest at iv per cent, less premium, which brings the interest down to 2.475 per cent. Incendiary Blaze Burns Five Acres ROSEBDRG, Sept. 16-CrV Fred S o u t h w i ck, supervising warden of the Douglas county Forest Protective association, to day reported, an incendiary fire near Pioneer bridge south' of Canyon vine was brought under control late yesterday. . The fire, set 100 yards off the Pacific highway in Canyon creek canyon, burned about five acres. Faculty Is Named for For Rickreall Schools RICKREALL School begins next Monday. F. E. Fitzpatrick will head the high school with Carola May of Mount Angel and Pearl Shorn way of Portland as sistants. At the grade school, cri tics win be Miss Pauline Judy and a Miss Donneckson. who cornea from Illinois. H. A. Dempsey will operate the school bus tor the district In .place of J. E. Ragsdale. - Dallas Pair to Wed DALLAS; A- marriage license was issued yesetrday by County Clerk Carl S. Graves to Alvln P. Loewen. 20. papermaker, Dallas, and Laura Marie Hlebert, 19, do mestic, Dallas. : i Ankeny School Opens JEFFERSON - (Special)- Ank eny Bcnool opened Monday, Sep tember 13, with an enrollment ef 20 pupils. Esther I. Kleper Is the M E D F O R D, Sept 1.-P)-Matches flaming in the bands of Leonard Adair, farmer, stopped a night freight train and saved his stalled car from demolishment, be reported to state police today. A broken steering rod.. Adair said, brought his automobile to a halt on a grade crossing. He leap ed from the . auto, held lighted matches over his head and halted the engine a scant five feet short of the car. Fehl Involved in Added Litigation Files Counter Claim for Publication in Suit Against Lawyers MEDFORD, Sept. 16-V-Earl H. Fehl, former Jackson county Judge convicted of ballot-theft, today filed an answer and counter claim in the suit of Kelly and Kel ly, legal firm, against him for asserted legal services. Fehl, who, under the terms of his parole on a four-year sentence, was not permitted to return here until last August 15, seeks $7500 in the litigation. The counter ac tion is an outgrowth of a civil suit filed by FehP against Kelly and Kelly for a printing bill, al leged to have" been incurred when Fehl was publisher of a local weekly. The law firm then sued Fehl for $2000 for legal aid. In the ex-jurist'a counter suit, he asked $5000 for services pur portedly rendered through his weekly in the 1932 judicial cam paign when the complaint cites. E. E. Kelly, as president of the Southern Oregon Bar association. promised a substantial remuner ation" for printing a campaign publication. Fehl also asks $1000 for services in securing the elec tion of E. C. Kelly to the state legislature in 1932, and the re turn of $1500 secured by the Kellys in a foreclosure proceed ing. Since parole restrictions have been lifted, Fehl also has filed a 'notice - demand" upon County Judge Earl B. Day, calling upon him to relinquish the office to Fehl, and a $40,000 damage suit against L. Neidermeyer and Nel- dermeyer. Inc., alleging fraud. Adult Classes to Be Resumed Here The WPA adult classes in oil painting, basketry and papier macbe, which have enjoyed a short vacation, will resume their regular schedules at the old high school building. These classes, which are sponsored by the state department of education and the Salem schools, have proved pop ular, according to the county su pervisor, Earl Utwiller. Mr. Litwiller advises those de siring to take advantage of the classes to register early as a large increase in" enrollment is expected 1 . ftL. nM W - , n U 1 f SgS:SJ 00,, WraasssgaaSS' "All in my family prefer this delicious ' Cr n ' bread of Julia Lee Wright's U has ZS 1 J 1 WL the goodness of real homemade," says - Lp v J - ' i V Tt jSSr "$2) Mr Perry Astern housewives ( ig 1m. raising 2. (QrmMZ: A f.VK. J YOUNGSTERS, I DO nrJ4il I . IN,- I w to y , : J AN 2. LOAVES Or JUUA LEE WfUdHtS B9JEAO rrZ fRJSH kino tsmrt.MQH-0 Stanfield, Snider Agree; Report to Be Given to Board Next Monday A" compromise solution of the iesue involving blocking of east ern .Oregon grazing lands was iu sight Thursday. Robert N. Stantield of Baker and Warren B. Snider of Paisley, named on a conciliation com mittee of the original commit tee of nine selected to draft the program which aroused bitter controversy at a meeting with the state land board here Mon day, announced yesterday that they had reached an agreement which would be placed before the land board next Monday. Under the agreement no unit of grazing land, to be blocked by trading state for federal lands, shall be less than 10 sec tions or 6400 acres. Stanfield contended at Mon day's meeting that 15 or 1$ large blocks would be more satisfac tory to the livestock raisers than a larger number of smaller tracts. Snider and seven other members of the committee of nine contended tor several hun dred small blocks. One tract proposed by Stanfield contained 1(0,000 acres. 81 cot ion Is Open Selection of a tract of land, Stanfield and Snider agreed, should be open to more ' than one applicant, either as an as sociation or joint users of the selected area. "Ye believe that this method will result in the state acquir ing reasonably large livestock nnits and at the same time will allow all pf the little livestock men the opportunely to select for their Joint use a state res ervation." the agreement read. Individual livestock men also may acquire isolated tracts to round out their holdings. The report recommended that applicants be required to file maps of the areas showing wa ter holes and to signify the terms they would accept. Any proposed Improvements also must be set out. Theodore Nicolai Called at Age 88 PORTLAND. Sept. 18-)-Fun-eral services will be held Satur day for Theodore Nicolai, 88, pi oneer Oregon sawmill operator and long prominent Portland cit izen, who died here today. Coming to America when 14 years old with his parents from Germany, he came to Oregon in 1886, crossing the Isthmus of Panama on foot. In 1868, with his brothers Adolph and Louis, he established a sawmill in the Bea ver valley and a planing mill In Portland, The" firm was incorp orated under its present name of the Nicolal-Neppach company in 1887. Nicolai street In Portland was named for him and his brother, Louis- it i V KM fr A : if-'. -! ' ' ' x , IM n ' '"I XX HrsJ.S.PeiTY knows that bread TOVT Dv 4 if rrMI Ah'id 1 .. till it's all eaten. So it'. less Y- AWKsA57 yTT nil I t - -fiJ-Hh- WtefaL "The freshest bread in I AWMrfcrt ZL ( f'' lKl r , , r i; 1 1 PIPNV PREAM TKZSh) I MORE MONEY CAVCTi 1 t . ';v: r I Jj 1 -n- wAA'7 i PI ki , - v Vif r -4 JfPf y' 1 Xtt . e&?Q HiCll'1' ...because L.rS. J. S. Perry knows that bread you buy really fresh stays good till it's all eaten. So it's less wasteful. The freshest bread in the store is a money-saver for jne, says Mrs. Perry, "espe cially since I make an extra saving at Safeway's low price" -f ' fii - ST T"? ' Ca- special ptaa asscrrf frtsk bread. Every day the tender, fresh loaves of Julia L Wright's Bread are .trail. V. 1 1 , m uunj io -storey without in-between dehju So you don't need to guess about the r freshness of this bread. Julia Leo Wright's reaches yoa fuH-flavorsd, delicious;., fresh as Grade A milk every day! - 4. - , x - , ; theyre MILD RIPE Bread and rnHk together arethereal"staff-of life? doctors say. And home economists tcill tell you that bread is most appetizing when you eat it fresh as Grade A milk! rushed LJ . 1 - I ( : W" f Y. t - i made of tobaccos Copyright 1937. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. .-.tt c i - tx rsr)t:jr. Idaho. teacher. .