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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1940)
Tb.9 QTXCOll STATESMAN, Cclens, Ortox Thursday Morning, Juna 23,1 1S43 A ? V'. - v ; t ''''J ' i" - f '- 5 f I ACM ACCOUNT "AUTOMATIC All V DMSOfl"IFili''i Salem: Federal Savinas & Loan Assn. , ISO S. Liberty St. Phone 3801 Wake up your Appetite!! A New Scotch Graham at Your Grocer's I S)S4nBnMBnBagjt iiwws'wsiw ' hh wmm L - i ' - - m xr.r v . ' " " " ' I. --J . . 1 WITH SLOWER-BURNING L la recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25 sfotrer than the aver age of the 15 ether ef the largast-eeMoc brands tastad slower than any ml them. That means, e the average, smoking plus eqoal to EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! This Ueek-End Only! . - - V- ' Tims : r , li I. i i i . Poultry Industry .Risc;Is;:nclcd New, YorkerlS peak at Oregon Convention ' in Corvallia CORVALLIS, June l.-flVA war-tightened t bond with South America may depress the poultry Industry but the necessity of feed ing: the starving of other nations wil( offset it, L.H. Hiscock said today. J.- " ' -'-t The New York man, president of the International Baby Chick association, told Oregon branch delegates at Oreeon State college that the eventual result would be expanded poultry production. ' Quarantine reitrlc t Ions' of neighboring states were denoun ced by Fred Cockell, Milwaukie hateheryman and state agrricultur al board member, in cases where they were based on killing com petition instead of protecting con sumers. He declared such regulations must be considered trade barriers unless they are applied within the states. Officers elected included Floyd Long, Portland, president; L. E. Cabe, McMlnnville, vice-president: Frank Erlckson. Hillsboro, secretary - treasurer, ami Kirk, St. Paul, Joe Russell, cor vallie. Gerald Avery, Tualatin, Mrs. H. A. Watsig. Roseburg, and Paul Vandenburg, Portland, directors.- Long and Erlckson also were named delegates to the na tional convention at St,, Louis. ' . jy committee will be appointed to deal with Washington quaran tine 'regulations and report at a later meeting. - Mill Worker Drowns HOOD RIVER, June Roger Thomas, 25, log roller, fell from a log and drowned today in the Jaymar mill dam. The body was recovered. ' The widow and 'two children survive. Si r- 1 i ; - - - 1 1..,.,,.,..,., . j -i ; . i in .. . . ,LJ ! U : , ; - IOv Mattress or Bos : S' : $1000 Winner, Ted T. Klrsch, Maupla, 1039 graduate of Oregon State eol- lege and long active in 4H clnb work, who has won the men's -'$1000 USDA extension service scholarship In Washington, tor 1040U1. Methodists Lose About 10 Pastors PORTLAND, June 19-(JP-The Oregon Methodist conference studied today the problem of fill ing vacancies in at least ten im portant churches, four or five of them in the Cascade area. Dr. Milton A. Marcy, Portland dis trict superintendent, foresaw some difficulty in finding ministers who could be released to meet vacan cies . without harming other churches. Some retiring ministers in this district will be available for supply service. The conference's opening ses sion was attended by approximate ly 300 ministers. mm ByOnncns (Regularly Valued at 21.93) Save 7.07 N6w! Specifications O 8-Oz. Woven Stripe Ticking (Hotel type.) j ; 220 Deep, Resilient, Oil-Tempered Coils. 0 Fully Guaranteed O Pre-stitched Border j Note: Box 771 - : "When Combination Is Purchased $ZII $1 Manager Is Named, : FafcHorse Show Professor Paul ITasHke Now Preparing List t of j Classifications Selection ot Paul R. Washke, Eugene, professor of physical edu cation at the University of Ore gon, as manager of the IS 40 Ore gon state fair horse show is an nounced by Leo Q. Spiubart, man ager of the fair. Washke has just -returned from New York university, where he has been - doing advanced work, ajpd while in the east gathered a limber of ideas which he will in corporate ' into the : week's ' horse show, which begins Labor day at the fairgrounds near Salem. r Washke, as a professor of phy sical education, is greatly inter ested In promoting recreation ac tivities and he f eela the horse of fers to the people of Oregon an opportunity for recreation in which) every member ot the fam ily ntay participate. He served In 1938 and 1939 as assistant I manager of the horse show and also as barn manager. Besides his educational work, he is active in civic affairs in Eugene and Lane ounty, having served as first president of the Eugene Hunt clnb, president of the Eu gene Rotary club and of the Lane ounty r PUblic Health association. He. is now preparing the horse show classification list. ' Glasses Will Learn Ores for Defense In the! light of present world conditions the lass of adults who meet each Monday and Thursday evening in room IB of the old high school building to study min ing are turning their attention to the discovery, Identification and valuation of ores and minerals of the type Which may be useful and needed In the nation's defense program.; This specific concern with the raw materials which might soon be in demand extends beyond the classroom meetings and includes the fieldi trips, which represent the "laboratory" work In this course of study. This mining class is a part of the WPA adult education pro gram. It is free to the public and no tuition charge is made. Sum mer registrations are being taken now. It's All Doubles In This Wedding, Even to the Rings ASTORIA, June 19-A-Dou-ble trouble for the society editors : A double double-ring ceremony will be held soon, with Josephine and Frances Waffle, sisters, mary ing Harry Swanson, Lincoln, Neb-, and Robert Swanson, ; Portland, respectively The Swansons are not brothers. Dr. Vernon Fowler will give away one bride and Dr. Frank Fowler, the other. They are uncles of the brides. 10 Licenses Suspended PORTLAND, June l-fl-Ten beer license; suspensions were or dered today by the state liquor control commission, which .refused 23 new applications and granted two. K Purchase on Convenient Credit Spring Same Price "Ql9 Dovii Delivers US Industrial Pplicy; Said Same As Ttat WMch Drove France to; Fate "tf ' Fiscal and industrial policies of the United States are the same as those which led France .to its present fateuCC. Crowj of Portland, editor rof the Pacific Coast Lumber Di- Wind Grounds two at THE.: DALLES, June Is-iflA near-gale broke loose two loaded petroleum and one empty wheat barges! from the tug Cruiser to day, diriTing two aground. " Thej tug Inland Chief recorer ed 1 one. ot the petroleum barges but the other was ' pounded against rocks on the .Washington shore i of the Columbia : rirer across from Rowena. The - wheat barge grounded at the mouth ot the Klickitat rirer. The wind forced' back the Mary Gail, another tug which started to the rescue. The three barges are owned by the Tide water Transportation company. AFL Opposed to Women Bartenders "ii a KLAMATH FALLS. June 19 Jfy Women will not work as bar tenders in Oregon if the Oregon Federation of Labor has Its .way. Federal delegates roted at their conrention here today to sponsor legislation prohibiting such employment of women. Ger trude Sweet, vice president of the Hotel j and Restaurant Employes International Alliance and the Bartenders International League of, America, warned that continua tion Of the practice would bring a "storm of protests." There was no debate on a reso lution; passed . proposing drastic changes in the unemployment compensation law. . - Third of Lost J Rings Returned Mrs!. Harold Holmes of Dallas has back the three rings she lost at State and Liberty streets Tues day.. ! Added yesterday to the two which she recovered Tuesday was the most valued, a large diamond. Fay Rice, shoe store owner, found the third ring and returned it to Mrs. Holmes. Barges Rush I While they last . v we're ayay ihcso color prints to let you more about Standard Service Extras . You can always expect "extras" and er thern at Standard J " because extras are the everyday thing. Extra attentions - for your car extra; travel Jnfbrmationcourtesies, con venience, deanlincssexrras wherever you go! And this week'sextra is another humdinger; beautiful, enlarged Art Prints of-the- Scenic West ree in full natural color- ready for framing! There's a whole series of them coming : ii - up here and in other sections wherever you travel in the -' West. They're being gobbled up fast so hurry! V For extra service get Standard Gasoline Unsurpassed. . . ... STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA - READY FOR 1 FRAMING! They're free they're stunning, the hit of the season 1 ' , Enlarged Art Prints of the Scenic West in full natural U j tolor arc yours for the asking at Standard. So beautiful 1 1 ' , - youTl want to frame them, drive in while thty last! I'; ' ,t ..." See the West with Standard Your cor ; llrta"3ri--a. Vse fleciarea oeiore ? ine saiem Rotary club yesterday noon. ., Crow asserted steps were taken In this direction through- perse cution of industry and heading the nation towards bankruptcy. "The United State, was the greatest nation in the .world when it had free industry with, reason able! regulation and before a vi cious element . got . to the . throat of all industry," the speaker de clared.' - ''-'-'-''' u , ' . Crow attributed France's fall to the reduction of the working year! to 240 days, compulsory va catlpns.on Jay and other limita tions on. production which sent costs up S5 per cent and produc tion down "to a level only 7 per eentj above the depression bot tom.! In Germany at the ' same time he said, production was pushed to 1091 per cent above the depression mark. The editor cited national labor relations boards penalties Imposed on industries and declared condi tions under the NLRB had caused 41 of the northwest's largest saw mill operations to be closed down by owners tired of being harassed by labor trouble such as Jurisdic tional disputes. "" Crow rapped the handling, of the Harry- Bridges, case, saying that! while British,- Columbia. -in 1936 had denied -hint a visa. Sec retary., of .Labor Franea Perkins had admitted: h'im to the United States 22 times by special permit. Portland Working To .Aid in Defense PORTLAND, June -(flVBus-iness: leaders organized today tor a share in wartime industrial re sponsibility and emphasized the need - tor more ships ot the sea and air. ' W.: D. B. Dodson, chamber of commerce executive, . was sent to Washington, DC, to establish a clearing i house ; for firms seeking a share in the government's mili tary and naval preparedness work. Simultaneously; the chamber of commerce directed a campaign to raise 215,000 for an industrial plant; survey. --Portland wants to take part In defense efforts, obtain beaeflts Of government contracts and prevent the drift of skilled laborers to other sections, Chamber President Ross Mcln tyre said. gives low-cost transportation - a rv r " - if .f v YOU GET BOTH FOR A$56.90Voloa t. Spotlight. 2. Toe-tip nozzle - adjustment. ' S. G motor. '4. Requires no . oiling. . 3. Dust-proof ' bag. . Durable con struction. . . 7. Unbreakable cord .General Electrfc . warranty. OSERMS . . $1 Down v Headquarters in Salem 1 1 immmmmmmm III I I r "474 S. Commercial ; - l i Phone 6414 . 8 Blocks Soath Ladd Jk Bash 'Bank ' , Conveniently LocaieMl Out of the High Rent .District giving Icnov mmii ' '; f iin m",W'i mMmmnlv .iu')i.i..-.-wnmn ' .. ' V . '. ; tAKI CHRAM AvoHobtw hi Woihlnflton -3S. 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