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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1941)
The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon. Thursday Morning. February 23, 1341 Salem Debaters Enter Tourney Willamette Has Teams in all Divisions : at McMinnville Forensics squad members from Willamette university start com petition three-days in the annual Pi Kappa Delta intercollegiate tournament at Linfield college, McMinnville, today. Reports from McMinnville Wednesday night in dicate over 200 students from 30 western colleges will enter.' Willamette will enter all divi sions, as will College of the Pa cific from Stockton, Calif, 1940 sweepstakes winner. -c Debaters ; from Salem; in the race with other teams were an' nounced Wednesday by Dr. Her bert EL Rahe, forensics coach, as Ancil Payne, Ralph May, . Harold Adams, Wade Bettis, Don Burton, Zeral Brown, John Hobson, Hall Simons, mogene Kusseu, Maxjor ie Waters, Dorothy Moore and Barbara Compton. Extemporaneous'speakers will be William Thomas, Joe Van Win kle, Zeral Brown, Wade Bettis, Emogene Russell and Mary Jo Geiser. : , Entries in oratory will be Wade Bettis, Joe Van Winkle, Marjorie Waters. Mary Jo Geiser, James Wilson, Janet Johnson and Doris Harold. Impromptu speakers will be RalDh May. Don Burton; Hall Simons, Emogene Russell and Mary Jp Geiser. Westly McWain and Don Burton will enter after-dinner speaking. Contest judges who will accom nanv the Willamette sauad will be Ralph Murphy, speech teacher a Dallas high school who substitute! for Dr. Rahe in 1938-39; Miss Marjorie Thome, also at Dallas, and a Willamette graduate; Thom as Terjeson, graduate assistant to Rahe, and Miss Constance Smart, former senior scholar in speech at Willamette and now employed in Portland. Youth Admits Holdup Guilt La Verne DuMond, 18, was bound over to the Marion county grand jury Wednesday by Justice of the Peace Joseph B. Felton when he pleaded guilty to a charge of assault and, robbery while armed with e dangerous weapon last Friday on W. H. Hen derson, Salem printer and pub lisher. . He was held in the county jail when he failed to make t 1000 bail.' Earl Junior Bonney, 16, accom plice of DuMond; admitted he had assisted DuMond, and was certi fied to the juvenile court. Thejwo youths together stole approximate ly $50 from Henderson. A" third youth, aged 18, whose name was withheld, also admitted that he stood 'close by while the robbery took place. Americans With Canada Wings pagz Esvnr An ' S 5 i f : 1j i Leading aircraftmen T. R. lfaguire (left) ef East Orange, N. and G. C Daniel, of Strong City, Kansas, are shown after they received their Royal Canadian Air Force wings at Uplands Air Station near Ottawa. They are now ready for overseas service. . Spring Opening Plan Pondered Final decision on the question of holding a spring opening this year will be made Friday night when representatives of Salem business firms meet at the Golden Pheasant restaurant with the Sa lem Ad club. "' Opponents of the spring opening wiU have a chance to air their views and state reasons for dis continuing the traditional practice, Redecorated - Enlarged Usual Wave 75c Perm. Oil - -Push Wave l. rA Complete jlvU Open Thurs. Eve. by Appointment " Phoee SA63 305 First Natl. Bank Bids. ' CASTL.K PERM. WAVERS ! Bill Lee Asks More Folding Money of Cubs NEWi ORLEANS, La, Feb. 19.-(JP)-Eill Lee, who pitched the Chi cago Cubs to a pennant In 1938 and then ran into two lean years of mound efforts, said today he had not signed; his 1941 contract and added "it doesn't look much like I wilL- They even wrote 'me that they would not give me as good a con tract as they offered if I did not report on time,t Lee said, "but I still feel that r am worth all that I am asking so am going to do my training here. Big Bill's stand was made known in a letter to the Associa ted Press from his home in Pla quemine, La, where he vows he'll do his spring training. Lee said he "was sorry the Cubs had sold Zeke Bonura because "he's a pret ty good hitter in my book and that is something we haye needed a long time.' y Final Rites Set . For Scio Woman Funeral services will be held at 10:30 this morning for Mary L. Ryan, who died at her home near Scio Monday at the age of 68 years. Burial will be in City View cemetery. Rev. J. Y. Stewart will officiate. Mrs. Ryan was. born in Califor nia and came to Salem in child hood. She was married in 1892 to Michael F. Ryan, and they resided in Linn county from 1902 until his death in 1935. She had been an in valid for several years. Survivors are children, Josepn ine Haberman. Marguerite Hoer- eth, Beatrice Keithley, all of Sa lem Angeline Huntley of Scio and William E. Ryan of Portland; lour grandchildren: two sisters, Mrs. Daisy Mclntyre of Salem and Mrs. W. D, Hoover of Aberdeen, Wash.; brother, James Stephens of Stay ton; an aunt, Mrs. Berilla Halbert of Salem. Church Leader Greek Victory Is Desired Turkey Says Axis Halted by New Pact ; Nippon Excited (Continued from page 1) cars in Libya, apparently poised for 'a drive Into Tripoli tarda; the Greeks said unofficially that the 11th Italian army in the Skumbi river valley was retreating slowly. and the Germans once more raid ed London. British See Nippon Step As Axis "Peace Offensive The British Dress saw the Jap anese step as a "peace offensive" by the axis, of which Japan is the far eastern representative. With the implications ef the Tarklsh-Bolgarlaa non-aggression pact still reverberating through the Balkans and Ea- rope, Greek spokesman assert ed that the Greeks took two for tified villares, 309 prisoners. Be also saM members ef an Italian company flee Ins In Albania were fired on by their own comrades and farced te return te the front line. In Africa, the British said Ethi opian troops took Njabara, south of Lake Tana, Ethiopia, and oc cupied Piccolo Abbai in the same region. Njabara is 140 miles inside Ethiopia from the western border. for the present draftees. The men are:' Richard Newman 1 Thompson, Knute Herman Ander son, Clayton Robert Baldinger, Rex Orin : Rogers, . Harry Bonner Harrold, . Wilbur Marion Curry, Bernard Henry Gentzkow, David Leroy Oliver, Nels Peter Johan sen, Ellsworth Oliver Martin, Don ald Gordon . Stockwell, Charles Henry Green, Eugene Ninnion Beall, Norman - Keith Winslow, John Frederick Hagemann, Mer rill Millard Russell, George New ell Stewart, Alva Richard Brown, David Peter Kintsfather, Thomas Rokos, Gordon Baker Eressler, George Elver Rohde, Byron Hazel ton, Jr, Wilmot Addis McDonald, John Robert Kihs, Otto Jay Wil son, jr., Joseph G. Webb. Mason Dinner Slated ' SCIO J. A. Withers heads the committee in charge of arrange ments for a dinner and program to be given by Scio Masons for their families February 57. W. C Winslow of Salem, past grand master, will speak. Senators Back Bill to Limit ; One Hopes Action Will not Lead to War . but Is Ready for It " (Continued from paga 1) . ment requiring appropriations or contract authorisations before the president could' send war goods abroad applied to equipment now on hand and particularly to . the transfer of additional destroyers to Great Britain. Byrnes' substi tute made it specific that no such limitation was imposed, and he argued that such was the original intent of the committee amend ment. Senator Vandenberg (R Michlgan) disagreed. . Senator Connelly, in speaking for the bill, said "the democracies must all hang together or they will hang separately." Ha thus paraphrased Benjamin Franklin's famous remark to John Hancock, made-when the Declaration of In dependence .was signed. Pies Auctioned Pay for Piano SILVER CLIFF The Silver Cliff Booster's club presented a Stephen Foster program in cos tume Friday night. A pie social, with Romey Lais auctioneer, proved successful. The sum net ted will - complete payment for the school piano. Taking part in the program were Mr. and Mrs. Thor Thor kildson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Mulkey, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jar vO, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Fox, Mr. and Mrs. James Mulkey. Mrs. Carrie Townsend, Mrs. W. F. Krenz, Varee and Richard R os tad, Orabella Vlckers, Jeanne Marie Mulkey, Barbara and Charles Lais, Gene; and Lloyd Mulkey, Edgar Lovett, Bob Goth berg, Floyd Fox, jr and Don aid Kirk. . I ' v i ) Committees appointed 'for ' the March meeting f are: program, Mrs. Ralph Mulkey, Mrs. Car rie Townsend, Alvin - Rosiad; lunch. Mrs. James Mulkey, Mrs. Thor Thorkildson, Romey Lais Hrisiting. Mrs. Fred Jarvill. Mrs. H. E. Hubbard, Miss Alice Brew er. r. l nunBEii STAIIPS? II E E D II A II ' S E E D n A n S V We are equipped te fmrsdsh your every need. We maaafactnre rmbber stamps. Notary er corporate eeeia ef all kind. Ilecdbm's 463 SUte Phoee 8803 BISHOP L L. HOLT Mass Services Set Sunday t Salem churches will unite Sun day afternoon at 3 o'clock in a mass meeting at the high school auditorium as a cooperative move ment with the National Christian mission which will be held in Portland, February 23 to March 2. Speaker for the Salem meeting will be Bishop Ivan Lee Holt of the Methodist church. Bishop Holt is a past president of the federal council of churches and past president of the church federa tion of St. Louis. Lebanon News Teacher Accepts Riverview Job ALBANY Mrs. Russell Knight en of Albany has accepted a po sition to teach the lower grades in the Riverview school near Crabtree. Mrs. Knighten will fill out the1 unexpired term of Mrs. Sawtelle, who had taught these grades last year and up until the present of this year, and who has resigned. Mrs. Knighten is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sommer of the Riverview community. LEBANON Each member of the Junior Woman's club was responsible for guests enough to fill one table for the card party last T h u rsday. Twenty four tables were played and the club netted $23. .High scores went to Mr. and Mrs. Loudon at pinochle and to Mrs. Felix Miller and Delbert Davenport in bridge. Mrs. J. G. Gill of Lebanon is one of the five Oregon delegates to the seventh annual conven tion to Pro America Republican women, to be held in Los Angeles February 24 to 28. Mrs. Gill is county chairman of Linn county, Among those taking the course in civilian aeronautics at the state college in Corvallis is Otto Ohm. M. E. Burgess was called ' to Corvallis by the death of his father, William Henry Burgess last week. Bruce Parton left early Sun day for Seattle from which city he will sail for Ketchikan, Alas ka, to his work. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Southard, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Whetstone, Mrs. Bruce Ensley and Miss Ruth Wright, represented Santiam post at the meeting of the coun cil for districe number 3 at Cot tage Grove, Sunday. Growth, Cheese Industry Told Carl Haberlach, president of the Tillamook Creamery associa tion, in an address before the Sa lem Rotary club Wednesday, sketched growth of the cheese in dustry .in Tillamook county during the past 30 years. Haberlach ex plained that production has in creased from two and one-half million pounds in 1910 to the 1940 yield of 9,884,000. The increase was credited to "organization standardization and modern selling methods." Haberlach quipped that the in dustry was "seriously" consider ing the erection of a sign over the highways leading into Tillamook, saying, "All that we are or ever hope to be we credit to udders." Lobby Hobbnobber (Continued from page 1) the UCC questions, will not be is sued before Saturday, if then. The committee will hold Its fourth meeting and its second executive session of the week at 8:30 a. m. today. Sea. J. A. Best ef Umatilla county was reported showing considerable improvement at a local hospital where he has been under care for the past week. His physicians said he probably weald be able te return te Us senate desk on Monday. Sen. Charles W. Clark, however, will be taken te his home at Rose burr today, probably not te re turn this session. He is serious ly ill. The Scotts Mills high school came to Salem Wednesday, stu dent body and faculty, to "do" the legislature, the capitol and state institutions. A delegation of Dal las students was here Tuesday. US Army Gets 27 Men From Salem Names of 27 men who will leave Salem on February 25 for induc tion into the army were an nounced Wednesday by William "Billy" Moran, chief clerk of Mar ion county draft board No 1. They will take special busses af 8 a.m. next Wednesday for Portland. Mo ran said no alternates are named (nnn a run uMi m 135 N. Commercial Phones 5197 - 7023 It Pays to Trade at Schaefer's Where Prices Are Always Loio PRICES FRIDAY, SATURDAY, THROUGH TUESDAY The Original Yellow Front Drug Prescription Accurately Filled Sole Agents Penslar Remedies and Candy Special Store In Salem 1839 1941 j In Marion County Store Hours Week Dave 7-.SO A.M.-0:OQ P.M. Sat. 7;SO AJtatQ P.M. Sue. ;OQ A.M.-:00 P.M. Holidays 0;OQ A.M-0:0O P-M. watch oun wnraon fob these specials - on display stabtiiig thuiisd ay EXCEXSIOnw TRUSSES (rem Hrnfa'(Ruhjre) my or NO UMKOa stR 1V--C Soft bw c pcrienced fitter. U them hfP W Tour ejection nd mfy fort nd aecuritr. w rwxaiyiiend 0 : NON-SKID TRUSSZ3 SFmilG IS HERE!! And We Hare a Fresh Stock of SASSAFOAS Bonn 8-ounce Super D Cod Liver OiL 85e One-a-Day Tablets.. .85c 83c 16-ounce Super Potent Cod lirer Oil -JU9 50c VitalU for the Hair.i-39c Fccfcry Specials - Uhils They Lari COLGATE DEIITAL CI1EAII 2 ICsfzbcs f:r . . . . ... A 4 -ounce bottle of Squibb Min eral Oil with purchase of a 16-oonce bottle at w J WE HAVE A COMPLETE STOCK OP FILMS AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES QUIT LIMPING 111 ; Let Us Help You Harrest Your Corns Uss Schaefer's Cera Ilcaedy IT TASTES GOOD AND IT DOES THE WORK : Schaefer's Hcrtal : Dakaa i V i i The Cough Syrup for the - Whole Family r: vf 24c f V JliuvJ uvl w w w m jczz. f' Rayon'Toffeto" SLIPS Vsmsel m7 Vefsel' Exauisrtefy trimmed or datntay tailored. Smooth i fitting, long wearing. Noiv-When You Want Them! Spring Coats You can own the good looking Spring Coat you want at thia unbelievable low price! Take -your pick of styles with swing ing skirts and squared -off shoulders, or casual swaggers! Tailored of sporty tweeds, col orful shetlands and wool suedes, dressy twills and wool crepes. 12 to 44. Special Vavtl D:inly COTTON PAJAMAS eSaerr e Cmfy Butcher boy and over blouse styles in crinkly cotton. Washes well. r rT nn- -i i -r t 7 90 Seeend Fleer WitL'orx' p V Miracle Values! Now Spring Dresses .98 Jean Nedras In sporty or definitely dressy styles! Gay, colorful spring prints, soft fresh pastels, or smart blacks and navies with clever trims. They look twice the price them! Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. Second Fl Women's Cotton Blouses Smartly tailored of fine qnal lQc ity cottons in fast color spring pastels. Secend Fleer) rrses 77 I (fitfayoritei ksil rayon V MoLx Lace l edomgW ( MMlfM If rnndtarCreoaliy ySSJ H niciiT couns f P 9 !V$k i lll Severn! attractive styles if Q ? Ovi S 1 ior womenl Wash and j v i i ; io v Iffy I BO-Sqvan J 5 Percales, cambrfes new sprem cks ei At., . leer 3 m Sojc Special While Limited Quantity Lasts! RUEN'SBRDEFS tW( floral ondrw ft 1 , A if oa r Wan Jl I i U i, t -note If V Fly front. Double back. Swiss ribbed sides. Snug fitting fine combed cot- j ton briefs with elastic waist. Hurry! UIIDEIlSIimTS TO IlATCn . ...17 c - Streamlined Beauty! 4 Electric Percolator - B lakes f Cups! (j Underwriters approved heating yeari element! Guaranteed one TavsIv anmiffh 4 mwm breakfast table. Heavy, pure : aluminum, aeu-measurmgx ' . DewBsiaiis Stere . . l V IXL if 'I 3n t - V An Vi