pagj; TOO Th OEEGOH STATESMAIL Scla. Orron. Tuiwdar Morning, May 23. 1S3 a V j-Twoper Gent r, Interest Rate t Premium Added; Taxicab .' and ' Zoning Issues Aren't Settled (Continued from Page 1.) pointed to All council vacancies until an election. ; t Mayor W. W. Chad wick an pointed KKdon to chairmanship of tbe airport and aviation com mittee, public buildings and in- cinerator and sewage and drain age committees. Belt will be chairman of the lights and elec tric signs committee and will -serv on the airport, public utili- i-tles and rules and revision of . minutes committees. Group to Supervise v Ware honor Building r ' Appointed as a special build ing committee to supervise eree- ': tlon of the new city shops and warehouse were Aldermen Glenn Gregg. E. Perrine and Uoyd f T, Rirdon. . u r- The street committee, which was directed at the last meeting to 'consider other sites for the .. new shops than the present lo ! cation at 12th and State streets, reported that the present loca t tlon is best, since plans and speci . flcatlons for the site have already j been approved by WPA, which is ! aiding In building tbe structure j The committee said it deemed it r advisable, however, to more the dog pound to some other location. I Alderman Mrs. Gertrude Lobdell f suggested . the incinerator as a possible site. - A claim for 12000 general damages and $582 special dam ages was received from Marvin V. Langford who alleged that on Jane 22, 1938, he drove his an (mobile into a city street flush er which was left standing with out lights and Improperly parked on Commercial street between Court and State streets. Chester G. Mnrphy, who Is building a business block at Com mercial and State streets, ap peared before the council asking special permission to construct an j outside stairway -on State street to a basement. Murphy said that when the plans were drawn the architect had Information from the building department that such a' stairway was against any ordinance, but that when final plans were presented the build ing inspector rejected the stair way. Building Inspector E. C. Bushnell said he had never been consulted. Fey for Street Use I'lanned, Resolved A resolution Introduced by Al d e r m a n McLaughlin was ap proved to provide closing of Win ter street between Chemeketa and Center streets to automobile traf fic between 10 and 11 a. m. from June 3 to 14 .to provide a play pace for children attending the Presbyterian church school. The council voted $50 to pay expenses of Captain Percy L. Clark of tbe city first aid crew at the Red Cross first aid in struction, camp in Washington. " A resolution waa passed de claring the Intention of the coun cil to impose a fee for uie of city streets for transmission of elec tric energy. The street committee reported favorably on proposals to place North 15tb street between Madi son and Norway streets on the WPA grading and graveling proj ect and to repair the intersection f Capitol and Bellevne streets. ' ta. .JL-JX- jLJ T Si , : f f - If : I ff .Si I IW' . Ill"' H l I 1 If n , leHioiiiE noalD-teo'us Where Peace r i v I u . I it - ' , iL. if and when peace comes to Europe, the city of ZInenster, Germany, in Westphalia, is believed to be the spot selected by Fuehrer Adolf Hitler if he has his say. The meeting place probably would be Sherman Law not Violated, Decided Apex .Finn not Awarded Damages; Three of Judges Dissent WASHINGTON, May 27-ff)-Restraint of trade arising from a 'labor union's sit-down strike "of the most brutal and wanton character" was held by the su preme court today not to violate the Sherman . act. The restraint did not "have an effect upon prices in the market or deprive purchasers or consum ers of the advantage which they derive from free competition," the court said in a 6-3 decision. Therefore, the tribunal added, it was not "the kind of restraint at which the act Is aimed." Chief Justice Hughes demur red at this construction as' too narrow and pointed out that "leaders of industry have been taught in striking fashion" that if they "Impose a direct re straint" upon trade, even for "benevolent purposes," they be come subject to criminal prose cution. Justices MeReynolds and Roberts joined fhe dissent. , The far-reaching decision, em bodying further clarification of labor's status under the Sherman act, was delivered in the case of the Apex Hosiery company of Philadelphia, which sued a local of the American Federation of Full-Fashloned Hosiery Workers (CIO) for triple damages under the act as a result of a seven week sit-down strike in 1937. The company won a verdict of $700,000 but a circuit court of appeals, which also held the Sherman act inapplicable, said the union "should be compelled to answer in damages" in a state court; '.i, May Be Signed ii t i 1. 1 Hop Grower Dies Emil Clemens Horst. 73, famed experimental agriculturist and owner of hopyards In the Wil lamette valley as well as in Cal ifornia, who died last Friday to , Btm Franciscev IIX photo. Grants Pass Man Is Rescued Again EUREKA, Calif., Blay Z7.-VP) -Adrift four days in his small fishing boat, Vincent Boyce, Grants Pass, Ore., fisherman, was rescued just south of Trinidad to day by Dick Reeves, Eureka fish erman. Boyce reported that his motor, which was 'the cause of a similar episode two weeks ago, caught "size"" : size 175-19 5-E3-17 Hitler Has Say i'i the Schloss palace, now the official home of the provincial governor. It was in Muenster that nego tiations were held in 1643 which ended the Thirty Years war. S. Santiam Logs Moving to Idanha Opening of new Road Seen as Booster for North Santiam Sawmills L. H. Ellison was granted a log hauling permit yesterday by the county court in what was believed to be the first of a series of per mits to be issued to persons de siring: to haul logs from the Junc tion of the North Santiam and South Santiam highways to Idan ha, a distance of about 23 miles in Marlon county. County Engineer Hubbs re ported yesterday that logging ac tivities in the South Santiam re gion have resulted in an increas ing tendency to haul timber from that region to the mills at Idan ha a few miles above Detroit. Prior to the completion of the South Santiam road over the Sevenmile grade, an timber cut in that area was sent to mills lower down on the south fork of the Santiam, rather than those on the north fork, he reported. The county is concerned, Hubbs said, only in making certain that log haulers i who use the North Santiam highway in Marion coun ty have the proper permit. fire last Thursday as he was re turning to Crescent City, and he had been drifting helpless ever since. 1 lN J. 'H1GHE3 and HICHIX That describes Chesterfield's Incrwasing popularity ond th 1 . ftroadway kit of th t ki.k atuM HUluv mm w.mw wwmmm Uit Erickson. Lee Dixon BUS Worth shore honors V Do you smoke the cigarette that's COOLER fr.af Mil nPR, tTisit TASTES Crrita WIS. r InmlHia tmmmCm, Junior Highs Plan Promotion Events Programs Today; Over 600 Graduate From Ninth Grade, 2 Schools (Continued from Page 1.) Cox. Mane Cox, June Craig, Nor- Til Crnzen, Estella Davis, Frits Deckebach, Lois Dierks. LyJe Dierks, Ed Dlmbat, Rnth Douglas, Maynard Drawson, Charles Drees, Dick Drinnon. Msrston Dunham, Mary East, Phyllis Eaton, Gene vieve Elliot, Pauline Elsey, Alfred Evans Helen Fabry, Betty Feller, Doris Feller, Irene . Finden. Jack Finden, Pat Fish. Duane Fisher, Lorayn Tossberg, Wanaka Frank lin, Lora Friesen, ; Edward Frye, Nancy Loa Falps. ; Wally Gemmell, Phyllis Giese, James Gilbertson, Lois G tilings, Eddie Goodrich, Ted Gordon. Lor en Gowan, Maxine Go wan. Rober ta Grabenhorst, Phyllis Graham, Wilmer Graham, Neal Hagedorn, Janet Halik, Billy Halseth, Betty Hannaman, Merle Harnsberger, Ted Harp, Dorothy Helbert, Em ery Hendrickson, Eddie Herman, Bob Herring, Eugene Hilfiker, Ines Hilfiker, Shirley Hill. Velma Hoar, Leo Hopp, Edna Howard, Arden Hadnall, Georgia Ann Hull Hazel Inn gen, Lois Iverson. Earl Jaieger, Richard Jensen. Henry Johnson. John Johnson, Courtney Jones, June Kantelberg, LaBurna Kelley. Alan Kent. Bertha Kihs, Allen Klopp, Ererett Klopp, Eldon Lappin, Don Lang, Patty Leary, Ramona Lenaburg, Doyde Lock ard. Loi3 Martin, Patty Maurer. John McAlister, Mary McClaln. Beverly McGllcbrist, Sally McLerran. Pa-' tricia Meislnger. Delia Merk. Er-' nest Miller, Pauline Miller. Robert ; Miller, .Wayne Miller, Georgia MooreTHelen Moorman. Jack Mor-1 gan. Bill Mott, Marjorle Mumm, I Clyde Nangle, David Nelson. Joe' Nelson, Phyllis Nelson. Quentin Nelson. Ruth Nelson, .Edward. Newman, Frank Nlst. Pa tricia No ble, Dorothy Nyberg, Joan Nye, Robert Olson. Wally Palmateer, Shirley Par ker, Gwendolyn Pearson, Bill Per llch, Edward Phillips. Dick Phipps, Doris Plnneo, Jim Pope, Herbert Ray, Ruth Reinwald, Margaret Roberts, Janet Rogers. Alice Rose, Evelyn Roseman, Donald Saul. Lois Scharn, Delores Schmlerer, Harry Schneider, Howard Schoen, Murray Schofield, David Shade, Warren harpe, Kenneth Sherwood. Clyde Shreve, Bland Simmons, Bill Smith, Bobby Smith. Barbara Spaulding, Non Stacey. Richard Stark, Buena Stewart. Norman Stone, Lloyd Straw. Jean Ann trayer, Nina Marie Swartx. Effie Tanner, Bruce Taylor, Gwelda Thatcher, Richard Thatch er, Bud Thompson, James Thomp son, Robert Tompkins, Kenneth Townsend, Bill Upjohn, Collins Utter, Benny Yaldez. Betty Van Osdol, Jane Waggoner, Boyd Wat son, Gersld Watson. Mary Sue Webb. Clarence Webber, Bud Wedel, Charles Whlttemore, Leo tha Wleglanda, Barbara Williams, Geraldlne Williams. Jerry Wil liams. Luanna Williamson. Jua nlta Wilson, Lucile Wilson, Ken neth Wolfe, Dale Woodruff. Nor ma Wooten, Gordon Wyatt and Jack Tonng. soen fcHxv ond I if VZ&Z Y '5- with -"rf r rT V- I 1 rf - i-i" 5 A-r vnii ppimntf nil th - m i . -r suv m i -- " i r r ' " field's right co hzi MAT! ON of the world's best cigarette .tobaccos gives millions of smokers every day J. the pleasure of a milder, cooler, be Iter-tasting cigarette? : The Chesterfield combination i really satisfies.- Comedian Will it '; 1 ' ? , ' ' Ii A Joseph frank. "Buster Keatoa, sour-faced film fwanrBnaa. Is about to trip to the altar for the third time, be shyly admitted recently in Los Angeles.. His new beloved is .Eleanor Ruth I orris, pert film dancer, who says she Is 31. Keaton is 44. The film star and bride-to-be are pictured at the! Los Angeles Hall of Records after filing , notice of intention to weL UN photo. Primary Canvass Complete for GOP M. ! Canvass was complete yester day for all republican candidacies voted on in th primary election held on May 17, County Clerk U. G. Boyer announced. Returns for constable and rep resents tire candidates not yet an nounced were as follows: State representatives: Berning, 3159; Carson. C932; Duncan, 7271: Finlay. 4548; Jonesi 5103; Manolis, 2732; Miller, Pugh, 3505; Ramage, Steelhammer, 7223. Constables: Woodburn, 1C87; 4559; Miller, 1192; Silverton, Cottenbertv 654; Amo, 22: Stayton, Porter. 488; Mehama, Winxer, 14: Jefferson, Jones, 41; Black-well, 2.0; Mt. An gel. Stolle, 35; Fnchs, 33. A num ber of scattering votes were cast in each case. j Write-ins for republican! presi dential candidates included the folowlng: Dewey, 432; Taft, 22; Roosevelt, 70; Vandenburg, 15; Wlllkle, 8; Downey, 12, with a number of other names receiving a few rotes each. For vice presi dent, Dewey received 104 i votes; Downey 79 and McNary C4. Child Is Drowned As Launch Upsets THE DALLES, Ore.. May 27-(Pjr--Adeline Foster, 2 -year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melrin Foster, The Dalles, drowned In the Columbia river yesterday. A gasoline launch in which the Fosters and three others were cruising overturned. All were res cued except the baby, whose body was later recovered. 1 1 BETTER 0 r A n Mcnm thnf I .hcftft-- - ' 1 i T II' B I ff MS J -bw m bb .sw l m mm m m-tr m mm m mm m mem mm m- mmmw .. .. - i S Take Third Bride Blaze Destroys 4 Vancouver Plants (Continued from Page 1.) Boat Works Ltd., Summer Brass Foundry Ltd., Western Machinery Works Ltd. Burrard Shipyards Ltd., suf fered minor damage. The tire started in the boiler of the Union Boat Works, swept through the low wooden one-story structure and spread to the West ern Machinery Works, Benson Shipyards and the Brass Foundry adjoining. A three-alarm signal brought 12 pieces of apparatus and 200 firemen to the scene. The flames were brought under control after doing only minor damage to the Burrard Shipyards adjoining the Union Boat Works on the opposite side from the destroyed shipyards and machinery works. Breaking out at 10 p. m. the flames roared into the sky, visible in all parts of the city and brought thousands of persons to the coal harbor waterfront. , Funeral Is Today ( For H. A. Weeks . - BILVERTON Funeral services wUl be held Tuesdsy at 2 o'clock from the Larson 4k Son chspel for H. A. Weeks, 88, who died Satur day at Salem. He was born in Maine, June 19, 1852. coming to Sllvertoa three years ago. Survivors are his sons, Jesse L. Weeks, of Mitchell. SD. Albert Weeks of Silrerton: sister, Mrs. Lizzie McEwen of Massachusetts and a brother-in-law. L. C. Jen nings of Sllverton. Interment will be in Bethany cemetery. X - , n '.'H Ul? v , ; 4 ; i I , 4H Summer School Instructions out Special Train to Leave on June 10; Dormitory Housing Arranged Corvanu1.1 trt,a wU1 Uk mm- Mtfen'.nrl0n,county 4" elubs to the ?t. un"" whool on 1,1. t U coUeR campus begln- Jesfsrd.vV0, "nounced yesterday la a 1 a 1 1 e r st-nt bv Harding to all club members plan- Tne trl h "" school. . ..The train will leave Canby at 4:30 p.m; on June lo. win reach ttoodburn atm4:48. and Salem, the last stop in M a r 1 o n county at 5:20. the letter statet. coun,y' " Club members attending ths school have been warned not to appear in Corvallls prior to the I date of the opening of the school, and to be resent on th nn.hi.i day only with all essential rre- aenuais ana persons! eirects. Older bovs attendinr th irr.i will be boused in fraternity house on the campus, it Is stated, while younger boys will be accommo dated in men's dormitories. Cirla will also be provided with rooms in three ' houses on ' th rimnua and will be accompanied by Ma rlon county cbaperones. The school, which will last tot two weeks, will offor a cnntfmf. ous round of lectures, demonstra tions, athletic and recreational eventa to bova and rlrU attend. lng. The Marlon county delega tion is expected to equal about 200 boys and gltl. Salem High Grads Attend Services A large crowd of parents and friends of graduates attended the baccalaureate services for the sen ior class of Salem high school Sunday night at the school audi torium. Rev. Robert A.' Hutchin son, psstor of the First Congre gational church, addressed the clsss on "Pay as You Go." Commencement .will be at f o'clock tomorrow night when Dean U. O. Do bach of Oregon State college will address the class. Admission will be by ticket only. Arrangements are. being made by class advisers. Mrs. Ag nes R. i Deny, Frsnces Fellows and Glade Follls. It'si GOOD MIlSTEn DHEJID AtY 4 VvJ; - : : ! tuna MADE FOX Errrist smoximo tfry ChtrfvM wwst cefori H H HgM taM4r4 ef tin mmi kop far ceif, h hw qrtna, dcfmilvty mll4 tmoi. Casttsrfialdls ere m4 rfgM U trrfy detail to glv ye Id da ratto tKrt rMlIf (A tm (ft saw rim "TOIACCOUHO. V.LA.")