The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, September 17, 1939 PAGE FIVE Local News Briefs : Coming Eventa ; Sept., 18 -City public schools open. Sept. is tresriman aays De gin. Willamette nniversitj. Sept. IS Sacred Heart aca-, demy, St. Vincent de Pan! school open. October 7-8 Lions cluD chartiy dog show, armory. Oct. .9-15 National Business and Professional Women's dab week., . - Co-ops Suing Comp Take Licenses Marriage U-1 censes have been issued at Van couver to Albert E. Prickett, 22J Independence, and Mary E.'Mes-l ser, 18, Fort Dodge, Kan.:. Leon ard R. Hagner, 19, Vancouver, and Lila J. Cole. 18; Dayton,"Ore.; Guy Langlej, 29, and Kathleen Marsh. 20. 'both Silverton: Iran Earl King. 18. and Alice Irene Berger, 18, bojth Salem. Roofing by Mat his. 178 S. ComT. Police Book Four Arrests made yesterday by city police in cluded: Jack Waldrpn, charged with drunkenness; Thomas A. All- port. 930 Mill, charged with mak ing an illekal reverse turn; Guy 1 C. Dixson, "Woodburn charged with reckless driving; and Robert V. Victory , 110 East Miller. charged - with violating ' the : basic speed rule.'. ' 'Mark Twain" brings you all that's new and smart in shirts. $1.5. A. A. Clothing Co., 121 N. High. i " s I Returns to Italy The United the Pacific Cooperative union and Statesdepartment of labor has in- n M , RM Cooperatlve Pro formed County Clrek U. G. Boyer " that Fortunato Monteleone. who duce exchange have,filed acUons was admitted to citizenship in this against the Allen Fruit company country in 1917 has expatriated I The former is to collect $6369.05 himself and became an Italian citi- alleged due on a note and a $600 ing to reports from the consular I" UUIUC' 1CC ttUU 1 " , service. ito collect anomer 14,444.11 ai Ana nr a nnto Til 11 a &t- wan payer, mauiu, io o. vumi. torney fee nt Pflvment Br en ton F.I Edwin Losii nas mea a com- Keikes, route 2 Dallas, yesterday I plaint against Ormand R. Bean .received Davment of S50 for in-1 and the state utilities commission juries sustained in an automobile in protest against a restriction or- accident May 20 on the Falls-. City 1 der wnictt restrictea nis permit ior road. Payment was made througn I common carrier operations to the insurance policy carried in I within 15 miles of Beaverton. He connection with subscription to The Oregon Statesman. any Allen Fruit Company Is Asked to Pay Notes Allegedly Due Two British Columbia concerns. For watch and clock repairing TT 1 T T,ntra 111 S T.Jhortir Puckett Picked up City police ,;udj yicu up and he sow seeks to e nere ior Ajregon tuy ouicwib. commlssion to accord there, was recently released at Oregon City on $150 bail. Re turned there yesterday, his bail was placed at $2000. stated that in 1934 Louis Strauss was granted an unrestricted per mit, and that in May of this year he purchased the permit from Strauss, together with the latter's carrier business. After a hearing the permit was ordered restricted. force the him the same rights allowed Strauss. Circuit Court Ray or R. D. V. Price please dial Ralpm i S139. Pension Boosters Meet The new county federated pension committee will be announced and introduced at a meeting of the Sa lem Pension Boosters to be held at Shrode hall, 12th and Leslie streets, Monday at 7:30 p.m. Boys Meet : Boy Scout troop No. 1 will meet on Monday at 8 o'clock at the scout house. Boys Eileen Evelyn Arnold vs. Rob ert A. Arnold; suit for divorce al leging cruel and inhuman treat ment, and asking restoration of plaintiff's maiden name of Eileen Evelyn Wittenberg. They were married at North Platte, Neb., last September 2. Public utilities commission vs A. C. Anderson truck service; complaint alleges $785 and $11 due as unpaid taxes. Fred Bo wen vs. City of Salem; suit to quiet title Grace Sherman vs. Ada O'Neil; are to bring scout books to study. I return on sale under foreclosure E. A. Miller is in charge. shows property sold for $1339.55 Art Jeffera vs. City or Salem and Louis Burgess; order sustain ing certain motions and overrul ing others. . Shirley Bontrager, minor, by Flue Fire A chimney blaze at I Flossie Bontrager, her guardian. 481 Union was extinguished yes-I vs. A. J. Paris; compromise settle- Brother Dies Perry'Wright re reived word Saturday morning of the sudden death of his brother, Alfred S., at Fresno, Calif. terday by city firemen. Highway Payment Will Shave Debt The state highway commission will pay off $1,000,000 principal and $376,613 interest on October 1, reducing its bonded indebted ness to $16,841,710. State Highway Engineer R. H. Baldock said the commission's pol icy would be not to issue any new bonds, and that the indebtedness would be reduced to $4,000,000 by 1946. At that time, the com mission will spend the money now used for debt ;retirement oh new construction. Squalusin Dry dock Ready ior, Exteniivelnspection, Overhaul F" 1 J v'J' 1 " i i i i i i i i i ii i i in i i mum 1 w m mmm mm ' J . mm ' i - . - -, 4 , - - . , - f Tls ft s - v f- .v rS J If :nN -L-.'7T Yii -1 7 1 im "ii 1 .1' fl S ' jitAM' Her 26 dead removed from the rear section, and once more riding on iand overhauling after 113 days at the bottom of the Atlantic. Note even keel, the submarine Squalus Is Known in aryaock at oris- diving plane to rear of small flat boat alongside. It is still extended month, NH, navy yard where she will undergo extensive Inspection Just at Is was when the sub took fatal dive. Athenia Victim Transferred at Sea ' I"" h'iJi t Z'z7 V. ' 4Tv ment of $430 approval based on a confession of judgment and com plaint' which alleges $430 dam ages as a result of an accident on I the Pacific highway on June 20. Probate Court Sarah A. Jory estate; fourth re- I port of Oscar L. Dencer shows $573 cash on hand, and that cer tain real property is still held. Olivia Bentson estate; order of confirmation of sale filed to Harry Bentson and Gilbert B. Bentson, executors. William R. Freeman estate; fi nal order granted H. S. Berryman, administrator; final account shows receipts and disbursements of $490. Justice Court Edith R. Conboy, no operator's license, $1 and costs. Walter B. Gilbert; pleaded guil ty to charge of assault and battery on complaint of his wife; case con tinued to Monday. Marriage Licenses Clayborne W. Dyer, 22, sales- Seegers Sell out 43-Acre Property Sale of. the 4 3-acre Robert Seetrer farm on the Indenendence cutoff 1 miles south of ;Brunk's 'intan, 495 worta summer, anaL,ois corner to Mr. and Mrs. A. Tor- genson or ueiix, ure., was re ported here yesterday by James D. sears, realtor. The Torgensons will take pos session Monday. An attractive country home is located-on the property. . Mr. and Mrs. Seeger are mov ing to Salem, where they have other property interests. SOX BORN BILVERTON HILLS Mr. and Mrs. Raymond- Smith are an nouncing the birth of a son Sep tember 4 at a Corvallls hospital. Both mother and Infant are do ing well and will return to their home soon. H. Walton, 22, clerk, 1577 Court, both Salem. Municipal Court Helen Kurth, violation of the basic speed rule; fined $2.60. Ray Huston, drunk; fined $10, committed to serve. John Arthur, drunk; fined $10, suspended to leave town. Ray Miller and Charles Scott; drunk; each given 10-day sus pended Jail sentences on condi tion he leave town. Obituary judd r - Percy G. Judd passed away at his home, route ; 3, Friday, Sep tember 15, at the age of 74 years. Survived by his wife, Edith, of Salem: daughters Mrs. Edna An derson of viDewdney, BC, Mrs. Esther Norwood of Berkeley, Calif.; Mrs. Dorothy Robinson of Portland; sons Frank E. ami Har lan A. Judd.of Salem, Fred T. and Harold K. Judd of Berkeley, Calif.; sister, Mrs. Charlotte Innis of Shelburne Falls, Mass.; broth ers, Roy N. Judd of Norwich, Conn., Frank L. Judd of San Die go; and' twelve grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Mon day, September 18, at TO" a.m. from the Clough-Barrick chapel. Rev. Dean Poindexter officiating. Interment in Belcrest Memorial . park. " '-: , 4 Chests Campaign . Shifts Meeting Because of the "conflict with cbamber of commerce luncheons, j the Community Chest campaign executive committee is changing its meeting day to Friday At this week's luncheon, Friday noon at the Quelle, all team cap- i tains are scheduled to have their full quota of workers signed up. Separate meetings of all workers in each division are planned for the following .week. -: " Smith : - Edella Irene Smith, Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Smith, route 1, -Turner, Sep tember 16. Funeral services will be held from the .Walker-Howell funeral home Monday, September 18,w at 2:80 p. mv Interment in the IOOF cemetery. FLOWERS 0LS0U, Florist Court & High Ph. 7166 Ttro Chemcnca Students Subject of Search Two Indian youths, Isaac Bron cheau, 18, and Richard Powakee, also 18, were reported missing last night at Chemawa Indian school. Both are from Idaho, and it was thought that they might have decided to return home along the highway. They had some money. Brohcheau wore a green jacket and trousers, and wore no hat, while his comrade had on a white shirt and black trousers, and was wearing a soft hat. . Hop Pickers f Wanted Win take all pickers out and return dally. ' i Register at -DURB1N A CORXOrER 433 State SU An Injured survivor of the torpedoed liner Athenia is shown being taken aboard the coastguard cutter Bibb In a Hoisting nei aiier transfer In mid-ocean from the rescue 6hip City of Flint. C'oast guard&men stand in lifeboat and lean from rail of cutter. (Associ ated Press photo from New York Daily News.) Bennett Heading Child Guidance School Chief Will Lead County Committee on Welfare Work Frank Bennett, superintendent of Salem schools, was named chairman of the Marion county child guidance committee as the result of a reorganization confer ence held Friday afternoon. Agnes Booth, county school super intendent, was named vice-chairman, and Gus Moore, boy's work secretary of the YMCA, secretary. The first clinic of the school year was conducted yesterday with Drs. H. H. Dixon, G. B. Hagen and Margaret Ringes, psychia trists connected with the Univer sity of Oregon medical school, in charge. This group also discussed problems of the department for the benefit of those in attendance. The personnel of the commit tee' selected yesterday, lncluds Dr. Vernon A. Douglas, Dr. Jerald S Backstrand, Agnes Booth, Lyle Page, Nona White, Dr. John, Ev ans, Emerson Holcomb, Gu Moore, Mrs. George Moorhead. Frank Bennett, W. S. Snyder, Dr Horace Miller, Mrs. Chester Op pen, Miss Helen Boker, Wayne Harding, Mrs. Ethel Fortner and Rex Putnam. To Promote Welfare The purpose of the child guid ance department, as set forth in the constitution adopted yester- day, is "to promote the conserva Uion of health and the prevention Fa ilnlinnnnnitv a vi rv rttriAr aTTI rtt i OTI , al disorders among children; to help secure faciltiies for the prop er study and follow-up of children with mental and emotional diffi culties; to make studies and to co operate with other agencies in the community concerning problems of mental hygiene of childhood and to act in an advisory capacity to the state child guidance clinic advisory committee." No Hitler Romance Wheat Production Will Be Discussed A. L. Girod, chairman of the Marion county agricultural con servation committee, has an nounced the afternoon of Tues day, September 19, as set for a meeting in Silverton at which the effects of the European war on wheat production will be discussed. The meeting will be held in the armory building, and will open at 2 o'clock in the after noon. All Marion county farmers. as well as others Interested, are invited. Among speakers will be Mr. Boegli and Mr. Jackman, repre senting the state AAA office and state extension service respec tively. The meeting, conducted on a county-wide scale, will be similar to a state-wide session held Wednesday. September 13, at Pendleton at which a large num ber of Oregon wheat growers dis cussed the problem" now facing them because of the outbreak of hostilities abroad. The chairman said that many Marion county farmers, with an eye on rising market prices, no doubt will be tempted to increase their wheat acreage. Purpose of the meeting, he stated, is- to de termine whether Marion county farmers, as a whole, think this expansion desirable. College's Opening Slated Tomorrow (Continued from page 1) The new class will monopolise the first two days' programs, with the examinations and assemblies intended to prepare .them for campus life. Upper classmen will register on Wednesday and regular classes will begin Thursday. The week's social calendar on the campus Includes the new stu- ClOEilE bQEfflG Long Terms Easy Payments Also r.Efl.Loans DAVKIHS & ROBERTS, Inc. Guardian Bldg. Phone 4108 dent-faculty reception in the gym nasium at 7:45 o'clock Monday night, the upper class women s party for freshmen women in the same place Tuesday night, the upper class men's stag in honor of the freshmen men at the city YMCA the same night, the cam pus organizations' get-acquainted program in Waller hall at 7:3U o'clock Wednesday night and the formal YM-YWCA reception in the gymnasium at 8 o'clock Thursday night. The season's first football ral ly will be staged Friday night as a prelude to the Willamette en counter with the San Diego Ma rines at San Diego, Calif., that niKht. Several new faculty memoers and a variety of new courses will face returning students. Law Codification Is Held Invalid Suit was filed yesterday in cir cuit court by William F. Wood ward seeking to restrain Walter E. Pearson, state treasurer, from paying out any moneys for the publication of a new codification of the Oregon statutes on the ground that the law permitting it, chapter 460 of the Oregon laws for 1939. is invalid for several reasons. Woodward claims a house and senate committee in the legisla ture which was to pass on the bill adopted an amendment decreasing the appropriation to $62,500, but that when the house and senate " 'i . - ' : f Miriam Verne Reports of a romance with Fuehrer Adolf Hitler which went the rounds when she danced for Hitler in Berlin, were denied by Miriam Verne, Pittsburgh dancer, upon her return home from Europe. Miss Verne, shown at home, told newsmen that such re ports were "siBy and stupid." She said that Hitler "treated me Just as a little girl." Stork Busy Here With 837 Flights Gain in Births Counted for Period of Year; Deaths Decrease The Marion county health de partment issued a report yester day showing a total of 837 visits by the stork during the first eight months of the year as com pared with 806 tor the same period in 1938. During this period of eight months the re port shows 476 persons died in contrast with 529 last year. Births are increasing while deaths are decreasing in Marion county according to these reports. Male babies totaled 437 and female 400. On the other side of the ledger deaths of males totaled 476 and female 278. Heart Deaths Lead The chief cause, of death con tinued to be heart trouble, an ailment which claimed 137 per sons as against 128 last year. There was a slight decline in the death rate from cancer, the fig ures being 62 for this year and 69 last year. Apoplexy took 45 persons and kidney disease 46, a decline from S3 to 63 respectively for last year. Automobile acci dents claimed seven persons, a drop from 10. The " activity report of the health department for the eight month period Includes 1057 smallpox and 1088 diphtheria im munizations, 2588 tuberculin tests with 627 positive reactions and 1744 laboratory tests tor syphilis. KO INSTALL STAYTON There will be in stallaticn .of new officers of the Knights of Columbus at the regu lar meeting of the organization next Tuesday night. District Dep uty C. A. Suhing of Salem will be the .installing officer. Lecturer Nick Fehlen is planning a special program for the visitors. Parole Chairman ' Assists Arrests Paul R. Keltr, Lafayette, state parole board chairman, assisted the Lafayette marshall in arrest ing two Portland men who alleg edly drove to Kelty's residence to pick a quarrel, according to the McMinnville Telephone-Register. John C. Carr and Gerald Crane, the two men, were arrested by Kelty and Marshall. Your eves, to be nor- mal, have to come i up to a prescribed ! standard. Have an examination f r e quently to relieve present and avoid future eye trouble. This o if i c e 19 well ! equipped to quick ly and economic ally give you last ing eye comfort. OPTICAL CO; Optometrists 444 State St. Ph. 5528 passed the bill they did not In clude the committee report and left the money clause at $63,000. He also maintains that the pro vision allowing free distribution of the completed code to all members of the 1940 legislature makes the law void, and that the legislature delegated to the supreme court discretionary power to enter Into a contract, which is an attribute of the legislature alone. He main tains that the $65,000 exceeds the bIx per cent limitation, and that the appropriation of the money Is deprivation of property without due process of law. Woodpile Fire Doused City firemen answered a call yesterday at about 8:30 p.m. at the corner of Chemeketa and Com mercial streets, where a woodpile was burning. The blaze was ex tinguished without causing appre ciable damage. AT NEEDHAM'S Srengthinq tou nonet fan Special! Canvas Note with SHS imprint Book 30C Tablets, Spelling Books, Composition Books, Drawing Tablets I. P. Note Book Paper 10c pkg. Large pkg. 05c 25c. Per ream l tOc fj Pencils for School Fountain Pens Large and small. All colors , and points. 23c, 50c & $1.00 lc each 3 for 5c 2 for. 5c 5c each Zipper Note Books 2.50 All leather and up Mechanical Drawing Supplies Ink Sets 25c 1.25, 2.75 3.25, 3.95 and up. RiESPiHiArva 465 State St. BOOK STORE Phone 5802 mm g w G9 (&mttt 'X5 WO i Financial Statement Sept. 18, 1939 k Assets 0 REAL ESTATE LOAN'S FirBt mortgage loans on property in Salem and immediate vicinity. SHARE LOANS ...... ... Short time loans to members on their accounts. FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK STOCK Our investment in shares of this "Reserve Bank for Savings and Loan Associations." FURNITURE AND FIXTURES. Our office furniture. CASH IN BANK 959,894.50 11,132.68 8,500.00 300.00 25,076.05 TOTAL. .$1,004,904.13 k Liabilities SAVINGS' AND INVESTMENT ACCOUNTS These are accounts of members, each insured to $5,000. " MORTGAGE LOANS IN PROCESS ' Undisbursed portions of loans nearing completion. DUE FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK. . 880,873.59 30,634.08 65,000.00 Advances from the reserve bank for our use in making mortgage loans. RESERVES AND UNDIVIDED PROFITS Net' undistributed earnings. CURRENT INCOME.. 16,391.59 12,005.07 Earnings since July 1, 1939. TOTAL: .$1,004,304.13 Directors Allan G. Carson Attorney Conrad Wi Paulus Hop Control Perry D. Quisenberry Pharmacist George H. Riches Banker Thomas A. Roberts Investment Banker Roy H. Simmons : Personal Loans Paul B. Wallace Automobile Dealer Keith Powell Arthur B. Bates , Officers Keith Powell President Thomas A. Roberts Vice-President Arthur B. Bates Secretary-Treasurer Custer E. Robs : Attorney ALEH TE D ERAL SAVIUGS & 10 A II ASSOC. Member "Inderal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation 130 South Liberty Salem, Oregon