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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 17, 1941)
PAG2 TEH Tlx STATESMAN, Sclera. Oregon, Wednesday Morning. September 17, 1841 Road Hazards Outlined at Firm Dinner Truck drivers were warned to be on the lookout more than ever this winter for driving hazards by R. . I. Scott, insurance ; company representative, in a talk at a din ner at the Senator hotel Monday night at which Salem Navigation company honored its 20 Salem and Portland drivers. . . ' : -r; ' Scott predicted that the com ing winter's accident f record weald be bad because, he said, .. national defense workers flock ing te northwest projects were In many Instances coming In -Jalopies.- The; speaker ; also presented safety awards to drivers who earned them during the year past ; Other speakers included L. G Davis, : Portland, manager of the company, and D. L. Greiner, Sa new parking regulations applying Jem agent, who discussed Salem's to commercial vehicles and in structed his men in a program of courtesy to other drivers. Twelve Salem and six Portland drivers were present. Service Men Where They Are i What They're Doing Glen Alvin Croisant, Hubbard, was enlisted as apprentice seaman and sent to the US naval training station, San Diego, Calif. Leonard Lee Hick, apprentice seaman is -spending 10 days leave with his parents at Monmouth. Hicks enlisted through the Salem navy recruiting station and re ceived his training at the train ing station at San Diego. Donald Charles Coker, appren tice seaman, is spending 10 days leave with Jhis mother, Mrs. Irene Coker, Salem. Upon his return to the naval training station at San Diego he will be transferred to one of the ships of the US Pacific fleet. Coker enlisted through the Salem navy recruiting station in charge of R. B. Fallon, chief luartermaster, US navy. Drivers Honored ior Safety Records During Past Twelve Months ''A J v 1 V.: csx 1 li 1 . Drivers ef Salem Navigation company and officials who honored them for their past year's safety record at a dinner at the Senator hotel Monday night are pictured here. Officials present include I G. Davis, manager, Portland; D. L. Greiner, agent, Salem, and S. L. Scott of the firm's insurance company--Statesman photo. . Four s Salem men were named Tuesday by Marion county local board No. 1 to be inducted into the US army October 17. They are. to report at the Salem armory to I Yl taton (-! 4Via 1-n A : 4 : . V M.Q 1UUUIUUU fiUtliUfl St Portland. The men are Charles Fay Warren, George William Wallace, Harold Wesley Maker and Harold Herman Persey. George William Huffman, fp60 South Cottage street, plans to ; leave today to enlist . in the US navy air c o r p s at Sand Point, Wash. JEFFERSON Dale Sherman, who is with the regular army sta tioned at Manila, visited the past week at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Sherman. He has been hospitalized at Manila for the past eight months; and following his furlough, he will return to a. hospital in California, where he will undergo nasal operations. Service Loans to Farmers Subject Of Sessions Possibilities of expansion of . community and cooperative serv ice loans to farmers will be con sidered at sessions to be held at the chamber of commerce rooms here Monday, Tuesday and Wed nesday of next week, according to Owen Jry Lemmon, Farm Security administration supervisor for Marion and Polk! counties. " About 40 employes from 18 western and southern Oregon counties, as well as representatives . from central and, eastern Oretron are expected to be in attendance at the parley where changes in the demands for agricultural products brought on by defense needs will be discussed. Among the speakers who are scheduled to appear are L. K Saum, Portland, regional chief of the cooperative section of the FSA and O. B. Hardy, Portland, who holds a similar state position. Hop Picking Continues In Wheatland District WHEATLAND Hop picking at the P. H. Fowler farm at Wheat land was finished Friday and the same crew "of pickers began in the J. C. Gilkey hop yard. Picking will be finished in the Maguess-Dryden field Sunday and the same crew will pick for Roy Michael. Corn Prices Down on 7HoIesale Market PORTLAND, Sept l&Hforn was down 10-15 -cents on the wholesale market Tuesday, sell ing 80 to 85 cents. The lettuce market was strong and Labish stock sold $1.75 crate. Others were downward to 11.25. C...LS VtD FFEEL If ycni rtsr aontMy cramps, fcack ci., tistress of "Irregnlaritlea," nervousness due to functional nor.ttlT disturbance try LydiA rixikfc&mVi ConiTound Tablets (wltb nlded Iron). UAde maveeiollv tor tromert. They also help build up red i tloci. TzZct label dinectUma.. ' ddltloo ..in the Neu$ SPOKANE, Wash.-Hff3)-The hoary alibi, "I was just waiting for a bus," failed to save Anton Sauvon, from a $10 fine -for drunkenness in Justice Court re cently, when the complaining wit ness testified Sauvon had done his waiting unbid in her bed. Ruby Phineuf, 19, the witness, told Justice Raymond Kelly she came home from a dance and found the strange man in her bed and called the sheriff, after he said "I'm just waiting for a bus." Sauvon explained he had "a little too much to drink and laid down to wait for the bus," going through a window to Miss Phin euf 8 room to do it HAGERSTOWN, Md.-flP)- Mayor Richard Sweeney has a formula for curbing the enthusi asm of auto drivers with song playing horns. Said he, in a com ment on complaints that the horns were becoming a nuisance: "Put the owner of the car in a cell. Put the horn and another man in an adjoining cell. Then let the owner listen to the horn, all through the long, long night." MOBILE, Ala.-P)Flabber-gasted was the word for the coun ty board of roads and revenues when it received this letter from Josephus J. Jives: '"My land was so poor it wouldn't even grow cactus, but when you put a road through it, th'ose ten acres became the richest plot in the whole county, thanks to a combination grocery store and jook joint I have erected. "Enclosed you will find a check for $142.22, which you will please have credited to the county's road and bridge fund. This sum repre sents one per cent of the unearned increment and my appreciation for the service the county has done me." AUSTIN, Tex.-(P)-H. H. Crockett wants to burn his weeds in peace. "Our fire department is too ef ficient. He pledged before the city council "Every time I set fire to weeds on my property along comes the fire department and puts! it out." He begged the mayor to have the fire chief leave him alone. CHARLESTON, S. C.-(P)-A four-year-old boy injured in an automobile accident calmly nap ped without anesthetic on the operating table as cuts in his face and legs were stitched. When the interne finished the emergency sewing, he awakened the lad, who rubbed his eyes, looked; casually at his bandages and walked away as if nothing had happened. NEWARK, NJ-(P)Mrs. David Mackinson thrusts her head out the window at 118 North 13th street and calls, "Triplets!" Chil dfed stop their play to echo the caH, "Triplets, Triplets." From three different directions come the Mackinson 8-year-olds, Diane,! Dorothy and Dolores. "They; always answer the triplet call and it saves my breath," Mrs. Mackinson explained. ELIZABETH, N J - (P) - Fido plunged through a plate glass window the other day for no ob vious reason and landed in a lady's boudoir, only to wind up in the dog pound. The boudoir, in the show win dow of a Broad streeet furniture store was barricaded with a chaise lounge plugging the gap in the window until police reserves arrived. AUGUSTA, J UtHPhC o u n t y Attorney William Niehpff, of Wa terville, got over the bumps with out a flat tire or a scratch during a 4000-mile motor trip through 19 states, but : Home again, he attempted to turn on the water supply with a wrench, it slipped, struck his face, broke his glasses, and cut a deep gash below one eye. WASinNGTON-(5-The g o y ernment has run head-on into its own system of defense priorities. Heywood Bell, - custodian of the senate office building, said he had been unable to obtain steel ca bles to replace worn ones on the building's elevators. . "I guess well have to use rope," he said. ,.. '. - " MILWAUKEE - (Pi - The - fish that jumped from the frying pan into the fire will have to take a back seat now; That is, if the seat isn't occupied already by a finny brother. . Theodore John, of Wauwatosa, northern Wisconsin recently. On his way to Wausau he encountered flood waters pouring over the highway so deep they covered the running boards of his car. "Once we got stuck," Mr. John averred. "We opened the car door and a lot of water rushed in. With it came a two pound crappie that landed on the rear seat It was a nice fish, too. We ate it for din ner." . Turner Mayor In Waslington ; TURNER Mrs, Hallie C. Endi cott, mayor of Turner, left by mo tor Thursday morning. for Bell ingham, Wash where she plans to spend the winter with her cou sin, Mrs. Winfield Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Williams have rented Mrs. Endicott's attractive home on Mill Creek for the win ter, and will move the -.last of the week, -'V , ?. f M" I t, . Mrs. Williams is the principal of the -Turner grade ' schools for her eighth year. The Williams re cently sold their modern "farm west of Turner to people from Hollywood, Calit, and the farm win be occupied by friends of the new owners. j Guests of - Mrs. Endicbtt this week prior to her departure, In cluded her brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Thomas, Ash land, and Mr. and pin. George Cornelius,' Colfax, Wash. - .-- - William B. Hoffnell of West Salem was in Turner; Wednesday visiting : among friends. ' He made his -home here in : the apartments over ' the postoffice ; for ' several years before moving this sum mer. !,',- Rev. Bruce Groseclose of Tan-gent-Alsea Methodist . churches was visiting friends ; in . Turner Wednesday accompanied by - Rev. H. S. Shangle, retired " Methodist minister - of - Milton-Freewater. Forty five ?years' ago Rev.' Shan gle' covered the southern' Oregon and Willamette i valley circuit in a - covered wagon and team of ponies, - later, serving . as district superintendent. ' .Everett Hansen . is located at Seattle In the employment of the Boeing Aircraft company as a me- chanic. Hanson had ; completed a mechanical course in Salem prior to leaving. Mrs. Hanson and chQ- j dren are at the Chris Hansen farm I southeast of Turner temporarily. Boeinff Takes More Workers SILVERTON Fourteen more v a u'n t men eomoleted defense sheet metal classes under Jonas ' Byberg here, and IS will report to Boeing aircraft at Seattle by ; Thursday. ' ; "" . " '' : Neil MacNeul will go to college this fall. Those who will report to Boeing are Oswald, Herigstad, : Dale Holliday,' Vernon ' Johnson, ; Dee Brooks, Barrel Wright, Glenn . Zimmerman, Wendel Engl man. Lloyd English, Bud - Slayton, Frank Fletcher, Myron Newton, Alten Snare and Edgar Williams. ; New classes will start Monday night. Registration will be open and anyone interested who ia be tween the ages of 18 and 40, in : good health and willing to work is eligible. 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