Thm 0J1EG0N STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon, Sunday Morning. Juno 1. 1841
i ; ; i -
Lumber Strilce
Climax Seen
Sheriff Gives up Plan
. to Halt Pickets; US
Board Seeks Peace ;
ABERDEEN, May StHSher
Iff M. B. Taylor abandoned plan
late Saturday to assemble all his
deputies and Hoquiam and Ah
erdeen police officers at the Ray
onier, Inc. log storage to enforce
a superior court order restrain
ing CIO loggers from picketing.
He said he would wait until
Monday when the injunction writ
la returnable in court
Earlier in the day he said two
deputies were unable to pre
vent pickets Friday night from
"swarming over the log storage
to prevent a tug from towing a
raft to the Hoquiam pulp milL".
Pickets were present this after
noon. !.-.'
The! storage contains 30,000,000
feet of logs. ' '.'!
SEATTLE, May 31-(P)-West-ern
-Washington's lumber work
ers strike situation fast approach
ed a climax this weekend.
At Tacoma, the AFL box fac
tory workers accepted leaders'
pleas in, behalf . of national de
fense and voted to return to work
Monday . with a 5-c e n t hourly
wage increase and vacation pay,
leaving the issues (which tied up
, three plants, employing 700 per
sons) to a federal commission.
The wage boost will establish ba
sic wages of 57 V4 cents for wom
en and 62 cents for men. The
- union had asked 65 cents an hour.
, .The Tacoma boommen's
strike, affecting 4000 men the
past fortnight, and the vastly
larger three-week-old strike of
12,000 ClO-affiliated Interna
tional Woodworkers of America
in western Washington still
were deadlocked. Boommen will
meet Sunday to discuss the
matter of retaining to work
pending arbitration, already re
jected by their leaders.
Answering a summons to meet
with the national defense medi
ation board in Washington again
Tuesday, O. M. Orton, I WA pres
ident, Saturday informed the
board the strike would end only
if the IWA's original demands
were met.
Monday, IWA union represent
atives, conferring at Glympia, re
jected the mediation" board's sug
gestion they return to work pend
ing study by a fact-finding fed
eral commission
Then came President Koose
velt's proclamation of a state of
unlimited emergency.; and his
surt-estions that capital and la
bor cooperate. Mediation Board
Chairman Clarence A. Dykstra
cited it to Orton's attention and
asked If the matter had been
laid before the rank and file.
- , Orton responded . there was
nothing new before the IWA.
Board Secretary Ralph T. Stew
ard, at Washington, asserted this
was no answer, and Dykstra and
Philip Murray, CIO president and
mediation board , member Satur
day telegraphed Orton a notice
of a meeting Tuesday.
Orton retorted that IWA rep
resentatives would attend, but
would end the strike only if de
mands for union shop and hiring
provisions and guarantees against
piecework (the two moot points)
and 7li cents an hour wage in
creases to 75 cents, and vaca
tion! with pay, were granted the
workers pending an impartial
survey of the dispute.
"Membership and officers,' he
informed the mediation board,
"are primarily interested in re
sumption of work under fair and
jus conditions."
Picnic Closes
Brooks School
BROOKS Brooks grade school
closed w'.th a picnic on the school
grounds Saturday. On Friday
night the eigtheh grade gradua
tion exercises were held. Mem
bers of - the class were Jordith
Stenson, Dean Bartholomew, Lilly
Kaneko, Muriel Fitts, Mickey
Tamiyasu, Hisako Kawata, Toshie
Tamiyasu . and . Alvina Hamann.
The following program was
presented: Processional, . Miss
4Neva Ramp; invocation, Rev. T.
' A. Dodd; salutatory. Toshie Tami-
. yasu; and song, Hisako Kawata,
Alvina Hamann, Toshie Tamiya
su, Jordith Stenson and Lilly
'Kaneko; class newspaper, Dean
Bartholomew; hobbies, Hisako
Kawata; accordion music, Robert
Harper; presentation of key, Lilly
Kaneko, president of 1941, to
Henry Ogura, president of 1942;
history, Jordith Stenson; rules,
Alvina Hamann; will, Mickey
Tamiyasu; vocal solo, Mrs. Earl
Streeter, and valedictory, Lilly
Kaneko. .
The address was given by Dr.
A. S. Jensen; presentation of
class. Principal Graham; award
ing of v diplomas, Sam Ramp,
chairman of the school board, and
benediction, Rev. F. A Dodd.
His Greatest Radio Address
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President Franklin D. Roosevelt
-Here is how President Franklin D. Roosevelt of the United States
appeared to his listeners in the White House when he made his his
toric radio address in which he : proclaimed an unlimited national
emergency placing the V. S. upon a war footing. The address waa
broadcast over all the radio networks.
Columbia River Power to Flow
Into Eastern Oregon Today
PORTLAND, Sunday, June MJ-Colurnbia river power
will flow into eastern Oregon ahd Washington today with ener
gizing of the Walla Walla, Pendleton and Pendleton airport
substations.
Electricity coursed through the
87-mile 115,000-volt line from
Midway to Walla Walla and south
to Pendleton. The Walla Walla
substation will provide power for
Columbia County Rural Electrlci
cation association as soon as REA
lines are built to it
. The Bonneville administration
said that in the past 32 days eight
Railroad Yards
In Jersey City
Swept by Fire
JERSEY CITY, NJ, May Zl-B)
-A spectacular fire that darkened
the sky with smoke for miles
around raged through the Erie
railroad yards Saturday night, de
stroyed two grain elevators, rail
road equipment and merchandise,
causing damage unofficially esti
mated in excess of $2,500,000.
- US coast guard headquarters at
New York said that the blaze was
brought under control at 6:20 pjn.
(PST), more than four hours af
ter it broke out
A high official of the Erie who
declined to be quoted by name
said that a $2,000,000 estimate of
damage to the elevators and grain
would be "conservative" and indi
cated the total loss would exceed
$2,500,000. At least two men were
injured.
The blaze, the second within a
week in Jersey City railroad yards
and the municipality 's biggest fire
since 1917, came amid nationwide
precautionary measures to safe
guard vital defense plants and ter
minals after reports were re
ceived of threatened sabotage dur
ing the long Memorial day week
end, j
The fire . destroyed the eight
story filled grain elevators, about
20 freight cars, many filled with
general merchandise, at least four
barges and 400 head of cattle in
the Jersey City stockyards south
of the rail terminal.
The coast guard said the fire
was brought under control when
it was confined to a section of the
seven-story mid-Hudson ware
house. Police and railroad offi
cials said the warehouse was filled
with millions of dollars worth of
bone, creosote, alcohol, crude rub
ber and pulpwood.
THE REASON WHY
More ! people torn to vs for their. Insurance Is
BECAUSE
Of prompt and Just loss settlements. We give the kind of
service yon nave
CHUCK
Oregon's Largest
- rT - ivr :
transmission lines and six substa
tions were put into operation.
On May 1 the Lewis county
(Wash.) PUD began receiving
power over the Chehalis-Mossy
Rock line to the Mossy Rock
substation; the Wasco County
(Ore.) Electric Cooperative
started power distribution May
24 with energizing of the Bon-neville-The
Dalles 115,000-volt
line and The Dalles substation;
Seattle's City Light was linked
with the federal grid May 25 by
a 230,000-volt line between Van
couver and Covington and an
11-mile line from the Covington
substation; Ellensburg was tied
in May 27 with a 64-mile Mid-way-Ellensbnrg
line and Ellens
burr substation which will soon
serve the Kittitas county PUD.
Other developments in May list
ed by the administration as im
portant were delivery of initial
power to the Oregon Shipbuilding
corporation in Portland on May 23
and delivery May 28 to the fifth
production unit of the Aluminum
Company of America at Vancou
ver, Wash.
Sugar Concern
Shows Films
KEIZER The Amalgamated
Sugar company is presenting a
group of educational pictures at
the Chemawa grange Monday at
8 o'clock.
v They will Include the sugar and
beet industry in Malheur county
and will be shown in technicolor.
These pictures have been shown
all over the state.
Public is invited and admission
is free. Refreshments will be sold
after, the show and proceeds will
go to the Child Farm home in Cor
vallis. The Keizer Calf club have held
four meetings this spring with
Donald Ettner, the president of
the club, presiding.
The calf club has exhibited their
calves at the Keizer Achievement
Day and at the Marion County
Jersey Cattle Club show. At the
latter Ruth McCall took second
in her class and Howard Saucy
took third in the class he entered.
Various members will exhibit at
the county 4H Livestock Fair in
the fall.
the right to expect.
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INSURANCE i
Upstate Agency9'
OSC Alumni
Elect Salem
Man Leader
CORVALLIS, May 3H-The
Oregon State college alumni "asso
ciation Saturday, elected George
F. Chambers, Salem, president
Ralph Reynolds, Portland, be
came vice-president; John Galla
gher, Oorvallis, T treasurer, ; and
Warren Reid, CorVallis, secretary
manager, . - . . .
The meeting, held In connection
with annual commencement, exer
cises, also saw the board of direc
tors increased to 16 to permit rep
resentation from I California and
Washington. -
Filling new positions will be
Harold Wahlberg, Santa Ana,
Lindsay Spight,., San Francisco;
Norman OliphanV Seattle. Other
directors elected were: Ross Cady,
Boise; Clyde Williamson, Albany;
Dick Brown, Portland, and Al
Engbretson, Astoria. '
Only two members of the class
of 1891 were back tor a golden
jubilee reunion. They were John
Starr, . Eugene, and Mrs. Anna Al
len Graham, Corvallis. Members
of the 1918 class also held a sil
ver jubilee. ?: ;
Baccalaureate services for the
graduating class of 773 students
will be held at 11 a. m. Sunday.
Special June Term of .Grcuit
Court and New Law Effective j
June 14 Start Discussions
Calling of a special June term of circuit court Saturday set:
discussions going in two directions in courthouse circles.
The special term, ordered by Judge L. H. McMahan for con-;
sideration of cases crowding the calendar is to open June 14.
On that date also a new law
goes into effect sending Judge L.
G. Lewelling to the newly-created
district comprised ; by Linn and
Benton counties, and placing juv
enile and probate procedures un
der jurisdiction of the. circuit
rather than the county court.
Whether the special term will
call E. M. Pare, whom Gover
nor C. A. Sprarue has Indicated
he will appoint to the bench in
the equity department into ser
vice sometime In Jane is one
question mulled, r
Judge Lewelling has let it be
known that he has been working
overtime to clear his docket and
declares all cases before him will
be out of the way not later than
June 15. Page, being given time
to close private professional af
fairs, will find a . clean slate
awaiting him, it seems assured.
When his appointment will be
made is a matter of conjecture,
but some observers declare riot
until fall, others believe early
summer.
What change in Uhe conduct of
the county juvenile office will
follow the change of the law is
another question raised by men
tion of -June 14.
JWU
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Wostlnghouso Super Market
Refrigeration vwth True-Temp Control
glvas you flva kinds of coW ntadtd
for vn lh timplasl maolsl
The cold that's beat for one
kind of food may;: ruin
another."' That's why you
need 5 different adnda of cold
in your refrigerator at one
time. '
SUB FREEZING cold ,
for frozen foods; NON
FREEZE cold (with moist,
moving; air) for meats; BE
LOW - AVERAGE cold for
milk and beverages; 40 cold
foe staples; and MODER
ATE cold (with high humid
ity) for salad greens, fruits
and vegetables.
Westinghouse gives you
this Super Market Refrig
eration PLUS many other
sensational features. Come
in and see the new Westing
house Models today.
Come In and Let
JFestinghouse
i r itf f""
YEATER APPL1AIICE CO.
"Strictly Private" J
QW NOT TOO ESs6KrnAU' iTWESfifc CU&ZrjGO CM-'lX
PEAR. AAflAU-
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THE SAB3E TXWiL AUO THt SAKE HPT
FOOTTHG TD ME- PRDBABLV TE11JWS TWE
COjONEL HOW tM feSFONSllE VCR.
wbtDiMS up :the mxB ABVC
THE. SiRSt'D
ABOUT IT.-
When Mrs. Florence Reeves,
middle-aged former school
, teacher was named juvenile of
ficer the first of this year by
the late county judge, Judge
McMahan let It be known In no
uncertain terms that he believed
Mrs. Nona White, longtime
county Juvenile officer, who
was deposed by the change, had
performed her work well. He
proceeded to appoint her bailiff
for his department of circuit
court, a position he has been
free to declare doesn't give
much exercise to her abilities.
The question posed by the sit
uation, and talked freely without
malicious intent is "Will Mrs.
w lute be juvenile officer again
after June 14?"
Open House Featured
r .
BRUSH COLLEGE Exhibits on
display at the school open house
Wednesday included arts and
crafts by the upper grade pupils,
including varnished plywood auto-l
graph and snapshot books, bird
houses, and dressing tables; Teach
REALLY, IT'S LIKE
HAVING FIVE
" i -
REFRIGERATORS
IN ONE!
Us Show You the
Advantages!
Salems Leading- Appliance . Store" . .
(Formerly Yeater & Rush Co.) a
255 N. liberty - Next to Power Co.-Fh.43U
By Quinn Hall
If jjt is: HiMtJT
CMVW.
buR sow
4-1
era responsible for the success of
the event . were Muriel Raster,
printipaV and Phyllis Scott
IN CHARGI OF DR. FRED FACELER, REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST.
PR. W. W. F RAZEE, DR. ROBERT GILBERT, DR. M. J. KELLY AND
DR. HARRY SEMLER
DENTIST
I It II . SjT a . u IS I
Oer Lew Prices 4 L&ersl Credit Terns, teekle te
kT cevrece end effMeat esteietricel eervice e aet
williia yew mtn. Yew ltMe delivered te ye HOW
... errssfo te 91 Isttr. Yes will ttrtclots hew eery k
k to errasee for crt at this effke. ... Ma tkird parry er
ruMa wiaeay re al with. Oaty a MaaH awa m"'
nr.
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Vice Drive
Is Started ;
SAN FRANCISCO, May 30-(JP,
-A concerted drive, on .vice and
petty racketeering, . , especially
around army - camps and naval
stations, was launched here Thurs
day by high military and naval
officials, cooperating with ; peace
officers of 11 counties.
Attorney General Earl Warren,
a consistent compaigner for anti
vice 'and gambling law enforce
ment, said the meeting in his of
fice Thursday was called because
of , reports that army and navy
concentrations in the state have
attracted an influx of prostitutes,
panderers sand crooked gamblers.
Scio News
. SCIO H ex Putnam, state
superintendent of public Instruc
tion, is to address Scio seniors at
commencement exercises sched
uled for the gymnasium at 8:15
Thursday, j Principal J. A. Bliss
announced; this week.' " v v
Class roll Includes: Lila Lee
Thayer, . Evelyn Kendle, - Betty
Railsback, Verl Sims, Junior Phil
lips, Vila White, Rose Rohwein,
Edwin James, Wanda Wilson,
Thelma Limbeck and Garth Snl
vely. . ...f . ;.
. The program fellows: Proces
sional, Robert and Florence Den
nison; - invocation, ' Rev. V. L.
Loucks; salutatory, Betty Rails
back; song, Glee club; history,
ids
. . youii .'.need
Dosses!
, . Statistics orovs If. because fhev tKaw th
7 persons out of every 10 have faulty vision.
Your eyesight is too precious o take chances.
Visit Dr. Semler's Optico! Department RIGHT
NOWj ... it costs norh- .
Ing te. find out whether
nr. not you need flosses
iTW w- e,0!l tO vs
SALEIV1...ADOLPH BLDGL
STATE & COr.ir.lERCIAL S T 5 .
Wanda Wflsonr wBf VH WilUl
prophecy, Thelm'' Limbeck; - va
ledictory; gong, Glet clubl tc
dess, Rex Putnam; awards, tnJ
presentation of diplomat-J. A
Bliss; benediction, Xrr. Loucli
recessional Robert and Florence
Dennison. '; " ,..:'..'(;;',;;
In the Scio high school gymnas
ium at 8 pm, Juno I, the follow
ing named members of the grad
uating class of tht local grtmnur
school are . to receive certificates
of promotion: . j
Alfred Boucher, Dorothy Cook,'
Floribel Gordon, Everett Haven,
Peggy Hoagland, Jack McDonald,
Earl Oakley, Beverly Schrunk,
Grace Summers, Dolores Zielin
skL . - . .
The program includes: Proces
sionalf Mrs. Ed Holland; "invoca
tion. Rev. V. L. Loucks; song, Ber
nice Loucks, accompanist; address,
Harry Harvie, Albany Junior, high;
cornet solo, Louis Zemlicka; ac
companied by his sister, Lucille;
diplomas, song, grade school
chorus; benediction, Rev. Loucks,'
ahd recessional, Mrs. Holland.
Whether of not the Scio school
board shall contract for approxi
mately $3000 of improvements on
the old school building, erected in
1895 and used during the last few
years ; exclusively for grammar
grades, is to be decided as a spe
cial issue at the annual school
election to be held here June 10. V
: This was the ' announcement
made this week by J. A. Bliss, !
principal of the high school. Pro- i
posal is to remove the . second ;
story of the building and arrange
ing ventilation, electrical, heating
and other features. , -v
ASSOCIATE OPTOMETRISTS,
DR. ARTHUR W. RUHNDORF
WADIr
FULLY
GUARANTEED
Quality nmuliani, cewyeri-'
mm wUI pm te yee tfcet eer
prkti ere et tike lewest set.
iale level . . . yet we Mt
fcMitt t tmtty mwM H
rrk. If ye lire et ef ttwe
yes ere forMed te ereil yevr
Mlf ef the ceevenieiice ef Or.
Sender's kwck eericel de-
Mrtmeatt M teeeM
SIM.
Shall (Down
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i SALEM AND MARSHFIELD '
129 N. rnmerclal-Salem--J)icd UZQ