The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 09, 1940, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    hi--. - - .
: . If J"!' - ".. :. , . 't L
.."1 - -
3U CnSSOIl Orison; arogorXg&a!a& Tsa S.lt:3
3.'
Instrument Reads Heat of Molten Iroh
Rehearsals to
i
Begin Tuesday
Oyer 800 Dancers to Be in
Centennial Pageant;
Sighing up now
with rehearsal dates drawing
near,' a last minute rash, to a i g n
singers, dancers, actors1 and gen
eral participants for - the Salem
Centennial! pageant is under way.
Ken Daiton, chairman of ?the
4ance committee, announced thai
over 860 dancers 'will take part In
the presentation. Among these
wilt be .rain dancers,' 200 girls.
Ages 12 to jit, experience unneces
sary; eartjh dancers, 100 girls,
ages 16 to 25, experience unneces
sary; inn dancer a, 100 girls, must
have experience; fertility dancers,
BO little beys, 50 little girls, 1 u to
14," experifenee nnnecessary; flax
spears. 10 boys and 10 girls, ages
8 to 10, experience unnecessary;
athletes, 30 . girls all sizes, 2 0
men, all fcies; lumberjacks, 20
men. athletic type; settlers. 16
men and IS -women, any age;
pages, 13 0j small boys. )
-All of these dancers are now be
ing signed! tP bat many persons
-who have j talent and could learn
the dances in a short time hate
not as yet registered. Alfred La li
mine, dane director, has issued a
call and set his first rehearsal for
,June 11 at 7:30 p.m. in the Wil
lamette university gymnasium. It
is hoped, that many persons will
register for the pageant at Cen
tennial headquarters. 260, North
High street. More information may
b3 ootained at telephone 7202.
$130000 Wage
Increase Provided
a . , i
Paper Mill : Employes of
Coast Vote for New
; Agreement
PORTLAND, Ore-, June 8-0$)-American
j Federation , of Labor
paper mill employes of Oregon,
Washington and California agreed
today to k new contract provid
ing a 81500,000 wage increase
to 15,000 1 workers.
The hew agreement, accepted
by a votej of f 000 to 3500 in a
coast wide referendum, boosts ba
ic wages 2H cents an hour, to
6 5 cents pa hoar minimum tor
men and cents for women.
It also provides a week's Taxa
tion with; pay for regular em
ployes of two years;
The contract , is retroactive to
June 1. I
" Cities primarily affected are
Oregon City, "Camas, Pomona, Los
Angeles, Vancouver, Wash.; Em
pire, Ore.,; Lebanon, Ore., Antioch,
Calif., Port Angeles, Portland,
South date, " Calif., Sumner,
Wash., Stockton, Vernon. Calif.,
Salem, Bellingham, Longriew, An
aeoijtes, Hoquiam, Shei:ton Port
Towjnsendj Everett, Taeoma and
St. Helens.
Spokesmen for the union and
employers! said there would be
"enduing adjustments."
Unions ilnTOlred are the Inter
national Pulp, Sulphite and Pa
per JMIH Workers and the Inter
national iPapermakers of the
three Pacific coast states.
Newberg Approves
Council Increase
'BERG, June 8H3V-Voters
approved (yesterday a city charter
ameadmant increasing the city
council from six to eight members,
one from each ward. ,
Fciur other proposed amend-
rnentls were defeated, however.
including one to Increase the
terms if mayor, recorder and
treasurer to four years each.
' f
r
f - i
It'
-A.
Ia the foundry of the Dodge division of Chrysler corporation, temperatures of the (molten meial are mea
sured i at a distance, with the aid of an ingenious optical pyrometer. In training the instrument on
the metal, the heat checker brings a small tllaminated colored ball within tho pyrometer into align-
. ment with the image of the stream of flowing metal. With the ball; and the metal stream in alignment,
the checker turns a graduated scale until a point is reached where the illuiamatjed ball disappears
from view. The indicator then shows the temperature of the metal at the moment of pouring usually
from 2810 to 2840 degrees Fahrenheit. 1 j
They're Mobile Ambassadors
- f f - v 1 - J -- , v
A'
-
'
.'
!asse&m
Left to right with Ford car No. 28,000,000, above, are Co-Pflots Jimmy
Booney and Charles Soderquist, headed for New York world's fair.
4H Gubbers Leave
Monday for School
Wayne Harding in Charge
of 201 in Marion
County Croup
Members of Marlon county 4H
clubs, including 69 boys and 132
girls, w411 leave tomorrow for
Corvallis to attend the annual
4H summer school held on the
campus of the state college.
Many of those attending will
leave today t 5:20 p. m. on a
special train from the - Southern
Pacific station.
Program for the summer
school Includes lectures, demon
strations and classroom work on
various phases of the 4H pro
gram. Students will also partici
pate in recreational activities ot
their own organization.
attending
school, the local boys and girls
will live in fraternity and soror
ity houses anad dormitories on
or near the college campus.
They will be supervised by
chaperona who will attend with
them, and will be under the gen
eral direction of Wayne D. Hard
ing, Marion county club agent,
who is also an administrative
officer of the school.
Court Asked to
Void Nomination
PORTLAND, June S-i-Rob-ert
O. Kjos contested today the
nomination of Walter T. Snearley
as county assessor in the demo
cratic primaries.
In a circuit court action, Kjos
charged Snearley was not regis
tered, that he filed an illegal dec
laration ef candidacy and cast an
unlawful vote.
The court was asked to name
Charles Ringler, defeated lncum
bent, as the nominee.
While attending tne summer
Bfera!s 1 jjg : !
r vLfoot $6.95 d ; rHSr--
1 1
v
28,000,005th Car
By Ford on Tour
Bay Exposition Is Visited;
Pilots now on Way to
New York jFair
Enroute to the New York
world's fair ; this week, via Can
ada, is Ford car No. i 28,000,000,
which recently visltedj the Golden
Gate International exposition and
was royally welcomed by highest
officers of state, city : and exposi
tion, along with detachments
from the British, and Mexican
consulates and the entire cast ot
America! Cavalcade of a Na
tion." i
The symbolic automobile arriv
ed at the San Francisco bay fair
simultaneously with jH. C. Doss,
general sales manager of Ford
Motor company, B. W. Slagle,
head of the Lincoln Zephyr-Mer
cury division of thai Ford com
pany, and J. R. Davis, western
sales supervisor, who were there
to conduct the first (gathering ot
automobile dealers on the island
during the 1940 season of the
exposition and open the Ford
building.
The car has been to Mexico
City on its 1 10,000 mile interna
tional good will tour. Civic recep
tions have been held at hundreds
of points along the route. The car
will arrive in New York on Ford
day, which marks the 8 7th anni
versary of the company. It will
be placed on display in the Ford
building in the New York world's
fair. a
Used Auto Drive
Produces Results
-1
Continuance Is Ordered for
Present Month, Is
McKay Report
Continuation ot the intensive
sales and advertising activities
which contributed so largely to
the sharp sales gains in used cars
made by Chevrolet dealers dur
ing May was announced here to
day by Bill Page of the Douglas
McKay Chevrolet company.
jThe records of sales for the
month just ended show one of
the most successful used car cam
paigns we have ever had," said
Page. "Persons planning .vacations-
have taken advantage of
the tremendous savings offered
at this time and have purchased
cars that will give them peak per
formance at great economy.
During the month ot May,
Douglas McKay Chevrolet com
pany sold 71 used, cars and
trucks, according to Page.
'This upswing in sales' repre
sents an Increase of 48 per cent
over our used car mark made In
February and an increase of SO
per cent over May of 18S9, he
said.
The outstanding success of the
recent used car campaign was
attributed to the excellent stock
of makes and models the McKay
company is "offering the N motor
ing public. "Many of the cars we
have on display are actually less
than one year old," Page pointed
out. "Our used car experts have
checked and double-checked all
models to assure every purchaser
an automobile that win give de
pendable, safe and economical
transportation. In continuing this
great used car sale, we again
otter the buying public the great
est values we have ever extended."
Two More Bodies
i
Taken From River
VANCOUVER, Wash., June 8
0T")-Tb.e bodies of I two victims
of last Sunday's Columbia river
boating tragedy near Bonneville
dam were recovered here today.
They were those of Mrs. James
Rowley, 35, Washougal, Wash.,
and Virgil Deaver, 19, Corbett,
Ore. Still unreported are Mrs. An
na McLaln, 35, Washougal, and
James Rowley, 35. The only sur
vivor is Edward C. j Rowley, 41,
brother-in-law of the woman
whose body was found.
A small skiff, bearing all five,
overturned in an eddy near shore.
Edward Rowley, who could not
swim, clung to the craft and was
picked up hours later IS mtlee
downstream. The others attempt
ed to reach shore. I
Aft M MM Tlffi tA f HC !
Hi.iH&iuw 1 . r s w a ;
Brand-new 1940 model with newest
cabinet styling, new FIBSRGLAS
lifetime insulation. -' ; . . 1 1
Also big "SanalloyH SUPER
FREEZES, with extra space for frozen '
storage . . . fast treezing ii-jJiv-A-v
CUBE trays . . . new, closely-spaced
yjATMT.TtAT? ahlvea - . . new TRUE-
TEMP Cold Control . ;f. the thrifty
ECONOMIZER rnechanisra. If truly
the buy of the rear. Come sa ana see ui
New
TRUE-TEMP Control
You may pay right with ytr lHrnt bill at Salem's Leading Appliance Store,
liTUj MUUaC livaimuvuics uu VU13 XiVlH j
ON LICEHTY STREET
NEXT TO THE POWER CO.
mt - a
. it 4 a -ces
t m ft ,v
-, (
"ll TOD 6.Y i
Patient Is Right;
Gas Smellbd by
Prosecutor too
SPOKANE, June,' 8-P)-Ed
ward Lehan, Spokane' county's
new deputy prosecutor, said to
night he still was . unconvinced
that delusions are not catching.
Lehan made his first appear
ance at a psychopathic hearing to
day and found one patient was
suffering from delusions of as
phyxiation. &
A short time later, he said, he
was closeted with pep'nty Ed
Lewis and two children on an
other case and suddenly began to
feel the effects of gas.
"It was coming; unj through the
floor, Just as that patient had
Insisted," shuddered Lehan.
He squirmed and looked at
Lewis, but said nothing. Then
the children grasped their noses
and rushed from the! room. Lewis
Jerked open a window and glanced
into a courtyard below.
A steam shovet, breaking
ground for a courthouse addition,
had ripped open a gas main.
County Officer Sentenced
EVERETT, Wash.. June 9-UP
Arnold Levy, former Clallam
county commissioner, was sen
tenced to a possible maximum ot
25 years in prison today upon
convictions of larceny and two
forgery counts.
Latest on Land and in Air
The np-to-thealnnte monoplane being serviced by the Chevrolet track above Is the new Vnltee Valiant
4, a basic training' airplane built by VTnlteo Aircraft, Inc., which also produces pursait planes and
bombers. The craft has a 43-foot wiag-spread, and when loaded weighs Jnt under two tons. It has
cruising range of 1050 miles, a service ceiling of 21,000 feet, and a landing speed of 53 miles an hour.
Both plane and truck, of coarse, have valve-ln-head engines for the maximum dependability and pow
er which that type of power plant provides. - j
Chrysler Has "Coming Out Party"9
i
1 V-
1 f
II
Chart ea L. Jacobson (left), vice-president and general sales manager
of the Chrysler sales division, Chrysler corporation, and David A.
Wallace, president, christen one of the new two-tone exteriors now
offered by Chrysler at slight extra cost. Because of the fine lines
of the Chrysler car, the two-tone combinations are particularly ef
fective. Owners may choose from among four combinations, namely,
two tones of gray, of green, of bine and maroon and beige.
Saving Possible
On Salem Bonds
A- possible saving of J4052."50
will be made' by the city of Sa
lem with-Its recent bond trans
action whereby funds from sale
of $98,000 worth of bonds bear
ing t per cent, plus $14,000 from
the sinking funds, will, retire
$112,009 worth 4 ot refunding
bonds bearing 3 and 3 per cent
interest.
The saving is only possible if
the newly issued bonds are call
ed for redemption in 1945. Total
interest : paid on the 2 per cent
bonds by that date will be-$6700
as compared to $10,752.50 total
interest that would have been
paid on the older bonds had they
been allowed to run to final ma
turity In 1945;
The transaction refunds $98,
000 worth of bonds and In addi
tion retires $14,000 worth of
bonds idue In 1941, thereby de
creasing the future due bond
debt by $14,000.
Portland Grows
At Least 5657
PORTLAND, Jun4 8--(ff-The
1940 census will show aC least a
5657 gain in Portland's popula
tion orer a 10-year period, Ruth
llaefner, district , cenVas supervi
sor, said today. ! A i -
The population will total 307-
572 and might reach 1310,000, she
added.
Episcopal Bishop Will
Receive Honor Degrcs
PHILADELPHIA, ijuna
An honorary degree, doctor of
sacred theology; will be conferred
on Rt Rev. William! F. Reming
ton by the University at Penn
sylvania June 12. j
Rt Rev. Remlngtoi is the Epis
copal bishop of eastera Oregon
and a former Pennsylrinla ath
lete.
" 5 'J" j , " "'"sw A v j-J ' "' i v - ' ,
r , ; - w - , -i i'i r o hl xa3 ftfcsin. mile? x "tm
n r t r. " r v8 from t&r - ca I
r ' ' ' - ' L I I o'toL tu I
J- -r- - - -. "- - - W tOtir tfi- I '
. v v . j , "Wassssaw. ' J. . - :
r ""
' - - . - - ,''-X"wrtrrr
.j "' - --;--- aa.; KP,J.'"' .Tr'w-f
xsy . ..,..., ,..
J - ' " ? 3 ; . ! ' - - - . .. "... .. , I - - - - . . .. .- f i - :
I'ilicn FOOD : cayo thcyf rb ready they arc !
Tou don't hare to baby "your ncx -Ford
V- 8 for 500 miles or so. The
great engine in-this car reports to
you ready and rax-in to GO I
You can ''gire it tbe gun' tbe r
minute it arrives bead for tbe
open road ; feel tbe smooth sweep
of power from those ecyZiuJer,
No other car in tbe low-price field -promises
yon such instant action!- :
. - No other car in the low-price field :
gives you eightylinder action! . -
ind every incb of tbe big For4
V- 8 car matches the extra value and
... . . - . j . . -' .
brilliajat performaitce of its engine. Tlie Typical American Car for the Typical American Family
Beauty, style, safety, comfort,
economy- every and any way you
want-to look at it here is the
quality car in the low-price field!
It Pays to Csd wi:!i tha Ford Dedcr
Tie Is ready. wCliitg and! anxJons to trade
any aaaka, Befora ym buy any ear, let him
show yon how eacy it Is to own a new Ford
V-S. Prices are low and Include eqnlpi
far wLkk yon ftca mut pay extra.
BOYS JOIN THE FORD
GOOD DRIVERS LEAGUE
es gef FKXZ eepy
mt tie sew 44-pegs best
HOW TO tECOMC S1QIU3 ; CKYEX"
ALSO, EHTMJt
WHOM-WISE CRIYI2 CCKTTIT
Prices iadnde 43 university scholar
bJp. 96 free trips to New York
TToriUT Fair and trophies to stata
and national winners. ' The Ford
llereary or Iiaeola dealer is local
League Uead'fuartera. See Mm for
information and Enrollment Blanks.
Jl
Jl
ri'f ) OTEP DP.T
H " -TIIE U'3 :GL".:
0
J
Villi Mli I ill ilr
f