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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1941)
1, Tha OBEGON STATESMAN, Salam, Oregon. Wednesday Morning. April 151911 pags czvnr Date Set for Graduation Stayton Students Make Senior Week Plans, Nominate Officers ; STAYTON Twenty-eight stu dents will, graduate from the Stayton high school the evening of May 29 when Dr. Elmo Steven son of Oregon State college, will address the group. A senior play, "Always in Trouble has been selected and work started on it. Graduates will be Wilma Lu eille Archambeau. Betty Jean Chitwood, LeRoy Merle Chrisman, Clell Carl Crane, Raymond Kin ler Frey, Phyllis Myra Hewitt, Anita Mae Humphreys, Virginia Margaret Johnson, Phyllis Eve' lyn Jordan, Richard Durrel Jor dan, Edward Herman Keidel, Margie Ann Knight, Edward George Kreitzer, Wilma Mae Lambery, Francis James Le filer, Richard James McRae, George Edward Mlelke, Iva Mildred Moe, Rose Ann Neymeyer, George Ellis Nightingale, Wayne Ellsworth Phillips, Orville James Poole, Ara Ellen Purser, Elmer Ernest Smel ser, Margaret Selean Smelser, Clarence Albert. Vernon, Edward Aloysius Walz and Arthur Joy Waters. STAYTON Felix T. Wright and Wendel E. Weddle were no minated for the presidency of the alumni association of the high school. Others nominated were: vice- president, Walter Smith and Jer ry Marking; secretary, Eunice Jordan, and Jean Darley; treas urer, Cloyd Harrell and Harold Pendleton; three year board mem ber, Betty Amos, Gordon Shields and Leo Humphreys. May 17 was chosen for the May day festivities, banquet and dance The banquet will be held in the Catholic gymnasium. On commit tees are Jerry Marking, Trevor and Max Stayton, Germaine Shel ton, Gertrude Pendleton, .Gladys Keyes, Bula Smith, Rex Shelton, . Lavene Marking, Eunice Jordan. - Minnie Boyer, Perry Keyes, Har old Pendleton, Raymond Kerber and Clyde Boyer. Milton Bell is president of the association. Other officers are Harold Pendleton, vice-president Irene Fischer, secretary; Maurice Shelton, treasurer; t h r e e-year board members, Maurice Shelton, Walter Bell and Gilbert Wourms. STAYTON Three more young men left Thursday for the Port land induction station. They are Melin Peter Pflaum, Silverton star route; Earl Maurice Rutherford, route six, Salem, and Carl August Hofman, route one, Aumsville. ' . All six inductees who left re cently were passed by the Port land office and are now in the service. STAYTON Helen Philippi was elected by the school board to fill a vacancy in the grade school staff. ' The resignation of Miss Agnes V. Johnson from the high school staff was accepted. The budget committee will meet April 30. They are George Duncan, George Kirsch and Walter Bell. Graduation Set GERVAIS Graduation exer cises for the class of 26 students New Ideas Presented in Spring 90m Left, natural tine fox coat; Spring fur styles are as luxurious and glamorous as ever, but fur fashion experts havej presented a new idea.- Sumptuous things cannot be worn aa often and really go fewer places, they- say. so they have concentrated on practicality and wear abilitv as well aa beauty. Canes, stoles and jackets divide the Interest. The first coat, pictured left. U portly nitr Axis Targets y - ? : an Here is a View of Belgrada, the iTi, oiuwa ny utnmn oomoers axier several paiace. auuiy t I In li-v.-.v.'J. '. . -T-V. ' i V - - Main German offensive in the Balkan war is di rected at the town of Nis, Yugoslavia, a strategic commercial center 130 miles southeast of Belgrade. Nis is shown above. The other picture is of Split, of Gervais high school has been set for Wednesday night. May 28. ; Attorney Francis Sturgis, Hillsboro, a member of the class rigai ehampagna colored white fox if v 'O.: e- - S if - - " " " " - th new 22-inch length. " The large melon sleeves feature the skins wo&ed in reverse to give! a natural shoulder lino. Right u a champagna col ored white fox, 24-inch jacket. In this model, too, the skins are worked to reverse fat the full-length sleeves. Inset Is the waist-length stole of ailyer i ox, oesignca uj this. lox. fa lgeTjndgttg-he aa4 u farm vauiaf -.4 in Yugoslavia as Balkans Flame i ft 'H' 17 T ftiVls ! ' If! i. - . , i - ' , v - capital of Togo- I attacks., At the f 1 1 1 I hi the town of Nis, in southeastern Tugoslavla ii :-x-4-.-!tv: Flew of the seaport of Split of 1926, will deliver the address. Rev. James Aiken Smith, supply pastor at the Presbyterian church, will give the benediction. If Fur Styles U7 jacket Inset, silver fox stole, ; ' cive uie exzec& or a waux-lengtai 2 i right in this picture is the Royal sres were stanea in La city. J v v V ' ' ' ' J a Yugoslav seaport on the Adriatic, which was bombed severely by Italian planes. According to the' announcement, vital "harbor works and ships" were destroyed at Split. Church Society Plans Conclave MARION The Christian En deavor of Friends church met Monday at the home of Keith Coulson. After ; the business ses sion, games were played and re freshments served. Present were Rev. and Mrs. Watson and sons, Floyd and Ron aid, Mr. and Mrs Ora Flower and children, Eloise and Fred, Mrs. Louis Fowler, Mrs. Kindred and children, Marvin, Edna, Eu gene, Virginia and Phyllis, Ray Hopper, Jake and Alvina Kien ling, Mrs.- Warren Baxter and Douglas and Ernest Officers elected for six months are president,; Edna Kindred; vice president, i Mrs. Louis Fowl er; secretary-treasurer, Eleanor Fowler; and song j leader, Mau rice Coulson. j Christian Endeavor service ev ery Sunday at ,7 p; rn. Everyone invited to services and v social meetings. Legal Notice NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That the undersigned HELEN LAIDLAW SCANDLXNG, Admin istratrix de bonis non of the estate of W. A. LAIDLAW, deceased, has filed in' the County Court of the State of Oregon for: Marion Coun ty, her final account, and that said court has, by an order thereof, designated Tuesday, the 6th day of 'May, 1941, at the hour of ten (10:00) o'clock In the forenoon of said day,1 at the County Courtroom in the Courthouse at Salem, Ore gon, as the time and place' for hearing objections to said final ac count and the settlement of said estate, at which said y time and place all persons so objecting shall appear and show j cause, - if any there be, why said account. should not, in all things," be allowed and approved, ' the said estate settled and closed, and the Administratrix del bonin non, discharged. ! HELEN LAIDLAW SCAND- LING; Administratrix de bo : ' nis non of the Estate of W. A. i Laidlaw, deceased. : ROSS & FORD, ! - ' Attorneys for the Estate, : -Salem., QttZon.iZrHW-lSzW. Club Elects Ner Officers UNION HlUi Union Hill Wom an's club met; with Mrs. Verny Scott Thursday afternoon. Elected - to office were: presi dent, Mrs. C TSf Heaten vice-president, Mrs. Dick Enyart; secretary, Mrs. Adolph Heater, and treasur er, Mrs. Henry1. Tate. . Mrs. Harley Scott rejoined the dub. Present yrere: Mrs. Henry Tate, Mrs. W. M. Tate, Mrs. W. H. Mollet, Mrs. W. H. Rabens, Mrs. Harley Scott, Mrs. George Scott, Mrs. H. H.Peters, Mrs. C. C. Car ter, Mrs. VAdolph Heater, Miss Florence Pottorff, Mrs. P. E. Heat er, Mrs. Dick Enyart, and Mrs. Verryn Scott The club voted to send a dona tion of money Farm Home at te the Children's Corvallis. The club will meet in two weeks Mrs. C. C. Carter. at the home of UNION HILL Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Heater Were Portland vis itors Thursday.! Willamette: Valley Cancer Talk; Slated LIBERTY M x s . George R. Moorhead, Salem, will be guest speaker and will show motion pictures on cancer control at the meeting of the Liberty Women s club Thursday meeting will be at 2 pjn. The held at the home of Mrs. Vernori Decatur, Every- one interested is Invited Road Work Started BRUSH CREEK Work on the Brush CreekBethany district road is underway. A large WPA crew is clearing the sides and working on the road bed. The road connects the two main Sil-verton-Salem highways. Turner News TURNER Mrs. G. W. Farris entertained the WCTU Wednes day afternoon. Devotions were conducted by Mrs. O. W. Jones. Mrs. C. A. Bear, the president, presided at the business session. It was decided to meet with Mrs. Mrs. William Spiers the second Wednesday In May. Mrs. C. W. Wilks and Mrs. p. H. Mills were named on the program committee. Attending wer Mrs. F. C. Gun ning, Miss fiaame tins, Mrs. u. W. Jones, Mrs. D. H. Mills, Mrs. R. O. Witzel, Mrs. M. Showers, Mrs. John Mitchell, Mrs. George Good, Mrs. L. M. Small, Mrs. George B rower. Miss Anna Hood, Mrs. C. A. Bear, Mrs. William Spiers, Mrs. C. I W. Wilks, Mrs. William Post and Mrs. Farris. Lois Gunning, honor student at Linfield college, McMinnville, was the weekend guest here of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Gunning. j ' TURNER Miss Lucy Mad den, Portland, is a guest this week at the home of her grand parents, Rev. and Mrs. M. B. Madden. j The senior class skating party was well attended in Salem, and the proceeds amounted to over $8, according to the president, Frank Ramey. j Russel Denyer writes to Tur ner folks from Schenectady, NY, that spring weather has failed to arrive there and it is snowing. He is on the night shift for three months in the engineering train ing school of the General Elec tric company. Mrs. Ada Mathias is slowly im proving at her home wehere she has been seriously ill the past six weeks. Mrs. Gladys Codner, Rosedale, is taking care of her. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Bones en joyed a visit with i their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Bones and children, Harvey and Irene, Brownsville, Corp. Delmar Barber, of Fort Stevens, is home for a several days furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Barber. MODERNIZE TOUR HOME NOW A U T OJX A T I C ELECTRIC WATER I- mm CONVENIENT CREDIT PLAN LOW v BI0NTHLY7 PAYMENTS Salem - Silverton - Albanj Business Good for Agricultural Communities Says Lecturer y WOODBURN W. E. HatrwelL Portland, was the main speaker at the meeting of iie chamber of commerce Thursday. ; He stressed the fact that business prospects for the coming year are good and will be felt in agricultural com munities like Woodburn, but any community has , to - present a "united front and jgo out aggres sively after the business." f '''X F. G. Evenden J and C. Rue, representing the public relations committee, ; said the chamber's next meeting would - be of spe cial interest to farriers. A speak er will probably be . obtained from Oregon State college. ' Fred Hecker, chairman of the civic affairs committee,, hopes to have a ttroveq wire fence built between Front street and the Southern Pacific right of way. John Ramage. chairman of the roads and highways committee, reported the committee has set five objectives: Oiling of the Children Examined GRAND ISLAND4-Fifteen chil- i- dren went through the pre school health conference held Thursday morning under the di rection of the Yamhill county health unit. Dr. H. M. Stolte and Mrs.. Edna Ferris, registered n urse or the health unit and Dr. O. C. Good- rich, dentist of present. Dayton, were GRAND ISLAND Members of the 4H clubs in the district will present a benefit program at the schoolhouse Saturday after the business meeting of the Im provement club. The program will consist of a wie-act play, skits and musical numbers under the direction of Mri. Grace Du ren and Mrs. Ruth i Stephens. Proceeds from the entertain ment will be placed in the 4H club summer school scholarship fund. ! Here's How, Anglers PEDEE A catch jwhich would have warmed the heart of an ex perienced angler was proudly displayed by five-year-old Rose Ellen Kerber when j she brought home eleven nice trout she had caught during a three hour fish ing trip with her father, J. C. Kerber, Saturday. PEDEE A t h r 4 e-act play, "Mama's Baby Boy" will be pre sented: by the Pedeej high school April 25 at 8 p.m. Falls From Bike SILVERTON Earl Hartman, jr., Is at the Silverton hospital recovering from injuries . sus- talned when he fell from his bi- cycle late Saturday. A junior high school student, he is the son of Earl Hartman, i Silverton fire chief, and Mrs. Hartman. Services Held In Portland AURORA John Daly, 92 years, died April 12. He was a retired farmer and lived in Au rora for about 10 years before going to Portland 13 years ago. He died in the Odd Fellows home in Portland. Relatives are one daughter, Mrs. E. J. Elling- son, san Diego, Cfaux, and a nephew, John P. Graves, Beaver Creek. Funeral services were Monday at 2 p. m. from the Ransom-Mil ler funeral home, (Aurora, with burial in the Odd Fellows ceme tery. Committal services were in charge of the Canby lodge, No. 158, IOOF, Canbyv I Hot oil the hot water you want with av jHotpolnt Water Heater! Once In stalled, you forget it. It's , safe, dependable, and economical to operate. S them today! 2W - l f HEATER r ' Free Parkini Woodburn-Mblalla road, and the east end of Young street;' widen ing of . Young street; improving another "section of Boone's Ferry Road, and to having the road be tween South Front street and St Louis placed oh the , oiling pro gram.; Ramage stated the first of these objectives had been delay ed by "failure of the government to do its expected part. Plans are already in progress to oil the Boone's Ferry road from the end of the present oiled section, a mile north of the grange hall, to the intersection of- this road with the Hubbard-Broadacres paved road. '. - ; y '"' : ' ' ... ' Winton Hunt, president of the chamber of commerce, stated that a committee would be named in. the near future to take charge of the annual Wjoodburn. fair sched uled next' fall. J. TJ. Hershberger suggested a poultry show in con nection with the fair be consid WOODBURN . The annual mother-daughter banquet of the Junior Woman's club will be held Wednesday at the Woodburn ho tel beginning at 7 o'clock. Mil dred Day, president of the club, will be toastmistress. The wel come to the mothers will be ex tended by Wanda Pavelek. Mrs. E. A. Lytle will give the response. The general chairman on ar rangements is Ethel Stanard. She will be assisted by Zoa Lowthian, Marjory. Faulconer, Wanda Pav elek, Emma Otjen, Helen Muller, Harrit Nibler, Alta . Stoller.-, WOODBURN The meeting of the Wesleyan guild of the Methodist church has been post poned until Friday. It "will be held at the home on Mrs." Walter Miller on Young street. WOODBURN Mrs. Floyd Massey and daughter Sarah of Butte, Mon, are . visiting at the home of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Sims. Mrs. Massey came to be with her mother, who is ill. ' , Woodburn Plant Considered by Firm WOODBURN A tentative plan of Libby, McNeil and Libby to establish a receiving station at Woodburn for handling cucum bers is still being considered. The following prices on cucumbers was quoted: No. 1, lVfc to 3 inches, $60 a ton; No. 2, 3 to 4 inches, $30 a ton; No. 3, 4 to 5 inches, $12.50 a ton; small crooks, 1M to 3 inches, $15 a ton; large crooks, 3 to S inches, $7.50 a ton. . If the plan goes through; cu cumbers will be shipped to the Portland plant every 24 hours for processing : into pickles. NOW . . . Exclusive in Salem I j Y , - I s mi i in Mill i i " "" n i " - ' ' . - 4 Coffee Table Is Reigning Favorite tcith - Clever Hostesses t ,- Ask any number of smart hostesses and home maker what' one table type they consider most indispensible for successful entertaining, and nine chances out of then' they'll tell you the coffee table, because this delightfulpiece is not only most decora tiv bat highly useful as well. The coffee table shown here exemplifies just how graciously this type fits into the modern scene. Ideal for serving coffee or other refreshments at any hoar, this piece also makes an admirable setting for low flowers and other decorative accessories. It is made cf mahogany with beautifully crafted details that reflect its heritage of fine 18th century design. A removable glass tray ; makes it even more usefuL . , r JV . SEE TfflS EXQUISITE LINE OF TABLES TODAY EXCLUSIVELY IN SALEM AT , xn: Health Club Has Program MEIIAMA The 4ll Health club j of the Mehama school will hold their Achievement day and pro- j gram at 8 o'clock April 18. 4 The Howell orchestra will par j ticipate and the Women's club will assist in the program. The Marion J -county health clinic will show 1 sound pictures of tuberculosis and ; , there will be ai 4H exhibit of health posters and other articles, : which will be judged and ribbons j awarded. ' . ! Pies, 'candy and popcorn will be i sold at auction after the program. ) Proceeds will be used for the 4H Health clubs. Legal Notice NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY QF MULTNOMAH - V I No. 46-499 In the Matter of the Estate of OTHO E. SMITH, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned administrator of the estate of Otho E. Smith, deacesed, by virtue of an Order of Sale is sued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the Coun ty of Multnomah, duly made and entered on the 27th day of Decem ber, 1940, in the above, entitled: estate licensing the administrator to sell the hereinafter described real property belonging to the said i deceased, will offer for sale and sell at nrivate sale, for cash, or ! upon such terms as may be ap proved by the Court from and af ter the 17th day of April, 1941, at 722 Corbett Building in the City of Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon, all the following described real property situated in Marion! County, Oregon, to-wit: One half (Yz) interest in the! following described property: Beginning at a point on the Subdivision line running East! and West through the center of Section 24, North 89 degrees 49 West 8.38 xhains from the quar ter section corner between Sec-i tions 34 and 35 in Township 8 , South, Range 2 West of the Wil - lamette Meridian in Marion County, State of Oregon; thence North 89 degrees 49 West 8.38 chains along the subdivision line running East and West through the center of Section 34; thence South 0 degrees 02' East 30.02 chains; thence North 0 degrees 02 West 29.995 chains to the place of beginning, and contain ing 25.08 acres of land, more or less. ! The sale will be made subject to the confirmation of the above entitled Court. , I Date of first publication March Y 19, 1941. j Date of last publication April 16, 1941. OTHO SMITH Administrator of Estate of Otho E Smith, Deceased. LEROY L. LOMAX Attorney for Administrator 722 Corbett Building Portland, Oregon M 19-26 A 2-9-16. AT II. L. STIFF'S Jl - i !