The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 19, 1941, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
Bishop Rites
Set Friday
Pioneer Gly Merchant
Dies Tuesday From
Scalding and Shock
(Continued from Pag 1)
service, R. H. Cltj, manager,
announced.
Telegrams and telephone mes
sages of condolence poured Into
the Bishop home all day Tuesday
and many friends of Mr. and Mrs.
Bishop called to extend their
sympathies in person.
Mrs. Bishop, her son, Roy, said
Tuesday night, was "standing up
well" against the sadness of her
husband's death. They had cele- ceeded by $1,000,000 those collect
brated their 85th wedding anni- ed in the state for 1939, while
versa ry last month and Mr. 1941's are expected to rise an-
Bishop's 87th birthday on Sep
The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon. Wednesday Morning. IToYemb-T IS. IMI
tember 23.
Got. Charles A. Sprsrue's of
fice staff members said they
knew the executive, who was In
southern Oregon on state busi
ness, would be gravely shocked
to hear of Mr. Bishop's unex
pected demise. The governor
Was expected to return to Salem
' this afternoon.
All members of the Bishop fam
ily had reached Salem Tuesday
night with the exception of three
grandchildren. Morton, who is at
tending school in the east, Mrs.
James F. Reville, Washington, DC,
and William H. Bishop, who was
en route north from Los Angeles.
other $2,000,000 to $15,000,000, or
a million more than the total
bonded highway debt, he said.
Credit for the financial condi
tion of the state should go to the
legislature's ways and means
committee as well as to the state's
executives, the speaker declared,
but maintained that it "reflects
the character and thinking of the
people of a great commonwealth."
Snell was Introduced by Al
derman David O'Hara, head of
the elections division of the de
partment of state, who was as
sured that the labor would ask
him shortly to address it on the
conduct of elections.
Preceding the speech, a violin
solo was .presented by Miss
Slate Industrial Selling
Points Told Labor Council
In the face of a rapidly-rising national debt and increased
taxation, Oregon's total lack of a state property tax, her lack of a
deficit, her low bonded debt and her record of new construction
without debt should serve as excellent selling points in attraction
of permanent and stable indus
tries to Oregon, Secretary of State
Earl Snell told members of the
Salem Trades and Labor council
Tuesday night
That the $14,000,00$ state
highway bond representing a
large portion of the state's
bonded Indebtedness are to be
liquidated by Income from such
taxes aa those upon motor fuel
and vehicles was pointed out
by Snell, whose office embraces
the motor vehicle department.
Gasoline taxes last year ex
The two grandchildren in the Ruthyn Thomas, accompanied by
east will be unable to come west, her mother, Mrs. P. F. Thomas,
Clarence M. Bishop, the Bishops' Charles Crary, the council's sec
other living son, who had been in retary, presided at the program,
New York, arrived in Portland one of a series planned as an
by plane Tuesday night and came educational feature to accompany
Immediately to Salem. Mrs. Clara regular business sessions.
Starr, of Brownsville, Mr. Bishop's
only remaining sister, and brother,
F. A. Bishop, Portland, were here.
Born in Contra Costa county,
CalLT., September 23, 1854, Charles
P. Bishop was brought into the
Oregon country two years later
by his parents.
On the Linn county home
stead ' near Brownsville where
his father, W. R. Bishop, erst
while California miner and
farmer, centered his activities
as farmer, preacher and teach
er, the boy developed a consid
erable reputation as a farm
hand but was determined to go
Into business. His public schooling-
was acquired at nearby
Crawfordsvllie.
River Carries
Pumpkin Crop
High Water Receding
With Temperature on
Upgrade, Is Report
(Continued from Page 1)
from a mark of -1.3 foot Friday
night.
Temperature, which fell below
freezing to 31 degrees Monday also
apparently is on the upgrade. The
weather bureau reported late
Tuesday night that a 41 degree
At the age of 20 he went to a5llalniMi ein n m
work for Kirk & Hume, early predicted minimum wouid not
Brownsville merchants. Two . ,., ,a .
win, uiai lliill emu Iwu
years with the Brownsville Wool
en Mill company preceded his
entry into the firm of . Glass &
Bishop 'in Crawfordsville' as
Junior partner. Six years later
he undertook operation of a store
in McMinnville, where he re
mained for another six years be
fore coming to Salem 50 years
ago.
In Brownsville, 15 years earlier
he had married Miss Fannie Kay,
daughter of Thomas Kay, sr.,
founder of the woolen mill in
Salem.
Three sons. Clarence M.,
Thomas Royal and Robert
Chauncey Bishop followed their
father into the woolen business,
spreading- the Bishop woolen
iynastr to Portland, Washou
gal and Pendleton. Fifteen
years ago Robert Chauncey was
allied in a Hunting accident ni rri H 1
B,TchJ! JfM 5S!L r lans 1 alked
In ArffaniTinit tha ttTaw utaaIam
mill firm, later operating its (Continued from page 1)
store, which became in 1891 the of planes here for the day, Tom
Bishop store. He was mayor of Armstrong, chairman of the city
the city of Falem from 1898 to council's airport committee said,
idol a lifelong republican he Representatives from the Port-
was a delegate to the national land and Los Anrelea offices
Nippon Envoys
Are 'Hopeful
Long Talk With Hull
Results in Note of
Japanese Optimism
(Continued from page 1)
any of the points discussed he
replied that he could not say at
this stage without running the
risk of being misunderstood.
Asked if the prospects were
such that he would want the con
versa tions continued, Hull agreed
that they were and that he ex
pected to meet the Japanese again,
probably tomorrow.
He explained that it takes
little time to keep up with the
ramifications of various questions
brought up, and that the Japanese
negotiators would advise him if
they were ready to go forward to
morrow morning.'
When a reporter asked if No
mura and Kurusu had shown eag
erness to avoid a conflict in the
Pacific, Hull suggested that his
questioner examine the statements
already made by these gentlemen.
Women Form
Survey Unit
Co-Chairmen Selected
At Capacity Conclave;
Polk Group Attends
(Continued from page 1)
FDR Rebukes
Le- Again
Government Action
Delayed; Sympathy
Strikes Progress
(Continued from Page 1)
union should agree to mine coal
on "more favorable" wage or
Attempt
Silverton Woman fazis
Tolron rW Ha til
new campaign
working conditions 'anywhere
within the Appalachian region.
The day also brought a state
ment from Mr. Roosevelt inform
ing the CIO that defense produc
tion must go on, and news that the
captive mine strike was spreading
further into commercial fields.
Sympathy walkouts have closed
18 commercial mines in western
and central Pennsylvania alone.
SILVERTON Mrs. Ethel Brown
died Tuesday at her residence, 213
South Church street
She was born in Illinois Sep.
tember 10, 1878 and came to Sil
verton from Texas in 1927.
Survivors include the .widower,
Homer E. Brown. Silverton; sons,
Charles Roy and Willie, of Silver- claimed on Monday, and the so.
ton, Claude A., Portland, and viet informant added:
Homer O., Sweet Home; daugh- The enemy continue his af
ters, Mrs. Lulu A. Glines, Triangle tensive, and soviet unit a r
Lake, and Esther E. Crocker, Sa- slowly retreating, offering tub
Start Drive to Cut
Off Rostov From
Reinforcements
(Continued from page 1)
lean; a brother, Edward Bartlett,
Iowa; and a sister, Lucy Lam-
brate, Iowa.
CIO Backs FDR Policy
DETROIT, Nov. 18-;P)-Full
support of President Roosevelt's
foreign policy was voted by the
Congress of Industrial Organiza
tions at its annual convention to
day while a group of followers of
John L. Lewis sat in glum silence
and refused to give their approval.
Delegates adopted a resolution
commending the chief execu
tive's "forthright" stand in the
foreign field, attacking Charles
A. Lindbergh whose name pro
voked a scattering of hisses
and urging extension of all pos
sible aid and cooperation to
Great Britain, the soviet union
and China.
After a relay of 15 union lead'
ers, witn CIO President Philip
Murray serving as oratorical
anchor man, had endorsed the pro
nouncement, the sentiment of th
convention was recorded on a
standing vote.
born resistance. Both aides are
suffering heavy losses."
Former Resident
Of Silverton
Dies in Idaho
GARDENIA, Idaho Mrs. Iren
Davis, 82, died at her horn three
miles west of her last Thursday.
Mrs. Davis was born
19, 1849 at Silverton, Or. She
was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John Shrum, who made the trip
w 4arn fraffi Missouri to th
west She was married to Albert
Davis about 72 years ago; '
After residing at Silverton and
c.im for 25 vears. she and
w f.milv made the trip to Ida
ho by covered wagon, mere uwy
homesteaded the land where she
X"X Ipparenferred to uved the balance of her I
Funeral announcements will be action of some time past; h e Fred Delillies of TUla-
ade later by Ekman funeral British radic ed
trpslTthrKeh aTea hid V'and Sward aiTof
"safely evacuated to th Albert , JP. M and arfaUof
rn 1 W-IO I -,... .1 h.li. rrnn. lrow " t
1 rucking firm
Hit by Quelle
in a broadcast saying that Rus
sian
been
Caucasus, along with their conv
iplete equipment and war mater
ial."
A' British authority declared the
I German air "arm far from what it
ni 7 rreat Grandchildren.
vs.rrai rviees were held Sun
day at the Bucknum chapel and
interment was in tne iuveni
had been-because of unfavorable cemetery at Emmctt
weather, the shortage of plan re-
PioLotofl Cat Aaklnir Pimento and the unending Rus-1-lCketea
laie ABKingl campaIgn of attrition against
Aid Promised
On Air Plans
Army Report on Salem
Site forSchool Will
Be Made Early In '42
(Continued from page 1)
rlsd to receive It and I shall bo
glad to make transmittal there
of. Kindest rerards.
Chaa. L. MeNary."
Armstrong- has forwarded to
Gen. Lincoln at Tulsa, Okla., and
to MeNary for use at Washington
slves, he said. data on the airport, city, nousing,
Aside from this present and d. ha tarda, utilities, transportation,
the picketing of the Quelle was velonina action in ' the southern sites for a school for pilots, me-
that the firm "will be very happy theatres, neither the Germans nor chanics and radio operators, air-
Permit Cancellation
For Non-Delivery
(Continued from page 1)
trucking line to the effect that
it was unable, in one instance,
Involving a keg of mince meat,
to deliver because its "drivers
will not pass picket line," and,
in another, that "consignee hav
ing labor trouble and union
truck will not deliver account
picket line. Both non-delivery
statements were presented early
this month.
Mrs. Nicol said the only state
ment she would make concerning
German airfields and would get
at the Kerch strait and Rostov its
first opportunity in some time of
striking with numerical superior
ity in the sort of relatively con
fined areas where it had made its
greatest reputation.
He added, in fact, that only
In such limited though Intense
operations was Hitler's air force
now capable of operations f
hlfh effect. It was too sapped
by the red air force, reinforced
with British and American
made planes, to hold Its former
place in widely extended offen-
British Shift
Staff Officers
Brooke Replaces Dill
As Chief; Promotions
Made in Key Posts
(Continued from pag 1)
Lieut Gen. B. C T. Paget 84,
to succeed Brooke at chief of the
home forces;
Lieut Gen. Sir Henry R- Pow-
nalL 53, vice chief of the general
staff, "selected lor a special ap
pointment' which was not disclosed;
Major Gen. A. X. Nye, 43, who
came up from the ranks in tht
World war, to succeed Pownall as
vice chief.
Lieut, Gen. B. L. Montgomery,
54, to succeed Page as general of
ficer commanding the southeastern
command.
Gen. Dill issued a statement
saying he had "always been
anxious' te see yeunger men
rise in the army and that this
"can only happen if older men
rive way te them." He said be
left the service "with the deep
est regret but rat glad te say
with no bitterness."
General Brooke, member of a
distinguished northern Ireland
family of soldiers known as "The
Fighting Brookes," is a steely-eyed,
dark-mustached man who won th
DSO in the World was fnd was
commended for brilliant direction
of the second British corps against
the Germans in the low countries
in May, 1840.
SEATTLE, Nov. 18-P)-The ex- to Dresent such a statement when nnssiana retjorted Tuesday night
ecutiv board of the northwestern we have been advised by Union any fighting on the grand scale
district council of lumber and Local 452 in writing why our and it appeared that along most
sawmill workers has approved a
strike vote for the AFL union's
members in Puget Sound lumber
and logging operations, the un-
Training for work is likely to 's official publication reported
The publication, the Union Reg
be the natural outcome of the
establishment of properly-Indexed
lists of women who would work said 00 'th! ?
nas Deen get, wiin aeiaiis leu in
the hands of the negotiating com
mittee. It -also was given power
to withhold the vote if the work-
EUGENE, Nov. 18-(P)-Mop-up
crews were at work here Tuesday
as flood waters receded from low
land areas.
Householders were cautioned
against using water from private
wells without boiling or chlorinating.
iwo emergency trips over
Southern Pacific railroad tracks
from Springfield at the height of
the flood, which closed highways,
were reported here i Tuesday. A
freight train brought Verne Walk'
er here for an operation and Mrs.
uan uannen gave birth to a
daughter in a hospital here a few
hours after a trip on an SP speeder.
in an emergency, Mrs. Dunbar
said, introducing Joseph Harvey
of the state employment service's
training department,
Also presented to the group as
representative of an interested de
partment was Ellis H. Jones, in
formational officer for the state
unemployment compensation com
mission.
Need for identification cards of
women taking the survey, estab
firm is being picketed.
Archie Elliott, business rep.
resentatlve for the union, de
clared the picket line was estab
lished because an employe of
the restaurant had been dis
charged for union activity.
Since arrival of the pickets, the
Quelle has been taking delivery
of the front both the invading and
defending armies lay panting for
breath in One of those rar and
unquiet interludes of the eastern
campaign.
Wednesday morning's Russian
communique did speak, however,
of heavy local action in the famil
iar Kalinin and Volokolamsk sec
tors northwest of Moscow and
base, etc. A number of maps arc
in preparation and are shortly to
be sent to the investigators, Arm-
storng said Tuesday.
Lincoln and his staff stopped in
Salem lat in October to inspect
the city as possible site for a
school.
tained by Associated Employers somewhere in the southwest stat
ers immediately are granted a
wage increase. No specific wage
increase demand has been an
nounced.
of Oregon, Inc., Dan Hay, execu
tive secretary, reported.
Newly Named
draft board Tuesday night tele
lishment of bounded districts for graphed sid:at Roosevelt that
FORT MYERS,. Fla., Nov. 18
(P)-The three-man Lee county T,,a. f.
. justice JUl
various teams, th us of Brhi no more auction papers Ior se, Raymond Wood, recently ap.
, - - i ii .. v j i i i . . , . i. .
fact that no follow ! tn . M John L- dictates the la- Sprague as justice of the peace of
quired unless returns of survey hoL lcJ of Umted States." district Nol 3, Curry county, can
cards nrnv -mh. Draft board Chairman Guy M. not legally serve in that capacity,
were discussed bv th n 1 1 r Strayhorn, Lee county representa- Attorney General I. H. Van Winkle
i i 1. V1.'J. i 1 m M
uvc iu me xiuiiua lciMaiure, ruiea Tuesaay.
Airport Fete
group.
W. H. Baillle, head of the Sa
lem office for the state employ
ment servise, spoke briefly of
the part women have played al
ready in meeting agricultural
emergency here and declared
his faith in their continued In
terest, pointing out that they
constantly come to his office
with the request "What can we
do to help?"
Mrs. Anna Morgan, women's
employment oficer for the Salem
branch of the department, who
assisted Mrs. Dunbar and her sec
retary, Miss Marguerite Shelley,
in contacting women s organ iza
convention in Chicago In 1916
where he helped nominate
Charles Evans Hughes for the
presidency. He served as a mem
ber of the state senate from 1915
to 191.7.
In 1907 he opened a branch
store in Portland, which he later
sold to Ben Selling.
In keeping with the wish of
. his mother 'who as Elisabeth J.
- Adams had crossed the plains
into California by ox team in
'1846 with her parents, he re
tained throughout his lifetime
his membership in the Cumber
land Presbyterian church. How
ever, the Salem First Presby
terian church considered him
.aa active communicant In the
organisation he helped support
, and whose service he regularly
attended. He was a member of
the Salem Elks and the Ma
sonic lodge.
- V,i1 4V ! a11 fA Vt KAirAj1
his 87th birthday, and later with FTe' and1
Mrs. Bishop had celebrated their "Pta f Tuesday
85th wedding anniversary. The success, the air ministry re-
tolden annivercarr of the store 1 pwveu.
he founded was also an event of
autumn, 1941.
of the American Express com
pany plan to be here for the
dedicatory ceremony and spec
clal arrangements are being
made through the company's
New York offices for window
displays, Harry Brown, Salem
agent, said. Further coopera
tion, not only for the purpose of
advertising the air express serv
ice but as a civic gesture, would
be offered by his firm, be declared.
Planned as the large social event
of the day, a dinner in which the
entire "area is to be invited-to par
ticipate is scheduled for tha
night
No time for the first official
flight from the airport can be an
nounced, Judd told the luncheon
group Tuesday, until the postof-
fice department has arranged and
made public its airmail schedule
made public the telegram which
said:
"We the undersigned do not
feel that we can conscientiously
sign induction papers for any
more trainees as long as John
L. Lewis dictates the labor pol
icy of the United States govern
ment and deprives these 21-a-
month soldiers of the full bene
fit of industrial production in
their preparation to wipe out
the scourge across the sea."
lng that German attacks were be
ing beaten off.
Berlin's claims, aside from the
assertion that a turn in th wea
ther had made it possible to set
the whole German line in motion
again, were confined principally
to relatively minor actions on the
Leningrad and Moscow fronts.
As to the former, it was de
clared that German artillery
bombardments had forced the
Russians to evacuate the sou
thern part oiLeningrad. but no
German effort to occupy that
part was mentioned.
As to the latter, the capture of
"a large town" on the Moscow
front was reported, but with such
The opinion held that the Cur
ry county court, without knowl
edge of Governor Sprague, re- ambiguity as not to mean much.
centlv extended the boundaries of Of the Donets basin somewhere
district No. 2 to include district above or before Rostovthe Ger
No. 3, and no vacancy in the of- man high command reported that
fice of justice of the peace existed the Russians had been thrown out
at the time Wood was appointed. of certain field positions and that
The justice of the peace of dis- certain undesignated Industrial
trict No. 2 will continue to serve, areas had been occupied by the
Van Winkle held. I invader
limitnniuitojanain
,. nirvs. i i
mrtMEimiOLATUM
INHALE
WkM yomr hom is Hefty, or, swol
len, asd n4, due to a cold, SMtpty
hiMft MtuHiobtsM la aca Mttrl
and iakal. Soon yomH fit a dli(ftt
M, cooliag, sootfeMg, rtUxiag sm
ufoa i tk kritatsd ismbfaaw,
Discoaifort will asicklv
ckanca to comfort, lart or T?F7
tsbt.30c
Would a Ilaesiro
Like Your Radio?
A trot matical expert, u
MtutMB4 to rnr particular
radl Mt, coal tell tastaaUy If
tu to ail quality wera marre
7 taftcta.
Etcb an expert, listening con
stinUr to a raela, waat ta
aeeiatery etect ru loes f (
flcleBey. atmce radl lib de
velop m rrmdaally taat tat ha
mu ear aecomts acrvstem rd ta
Urn, the rare war ta f rt
ualtty perfermamee as te have
your radio checked ky aa ex
pert every six moaths.
TEKNI-CHEK
Radio Inspection
Chassis and speaker
cleaned, tubes checked,
micrometer a d justment
of moving parts, wiring
checked, tonal
test, etc
$1.00
Radio Repair ... Phone 555
BUBQOUGH'S
ELECTRIC
til Court SL
NEW YORK, Nov. 18-UP)-Wen
dell L. Willkie charged the Roo
sevelt administration Tuesday
tions of the mid-valley district, Is Ight aUure to announce 8
to serve as secretarv for th- Mar. dear 811(1 ea Plicy labor,
ion county unit of the survey.
Mrs. beorge Rossman. Salem.
member of the state committee,
assisted In arranging the program.
Mill City Sets
Alumni Clash
MILL CITY The Mill City f oot-
and suggested that labor be given
a share in the responsibility and
policy-making of the government
Pastor Applauds
Pilgrims' Spirit
Decrying the lack of apprecia
tion shown by the average citi
zen ior the great heritage civen
him by his forefathers, Rev. Rob-
.ZJZiJFA. Congregational church,
olavs an T " F8" members of the Kiwanis
-aiumni here dub to' carry on the-snlrit oflhf
iuaiiKS?ivinv naw -
1 I PillTT-imc
Frank Smith, former Mill Citv ...
coach, will head the alumni group. Kn7f L k. m q8m2f
The Mill Citv tAm I nette of the blessings that be-
th- cam. Z'SZ: r.riong to us we must remember
be defeated in nlav th;. m.-. ure uuns uiai enncn out
n, vf :.l :7, I. . ' I "ves are the work of others. W
: uura, nuuer .t r.aoA 4 .
.-j vui mure into
life than we take out of it, Rev.
nutcninson pointed out In his
Thanksgiving address at the club
luncheon Tuesday.
and Chance; guards, Naue and
Rogers; center, H. Weitman; backs,
-eiers, 1-aiacK, s, -Weitman and
Hoeye.
Italos 'Damn English9
ROME, Nov. 18 -(JP)-Italians
Tuesday celebrated the sixth an
niversary of British-led League of
Nations economic sanctions
against their war on Ethiopia by
buying metal badges with such
inscriptions as "Win!" and "Damn
th English." .
Subs Block Aid Route
BERLIN, Wednesday, Nov. 19-
OT-German submarines are op
erating in the White sea, German
commentators declared today, em
phasizing assertions that this is
on the route of any United States
merchantman bound for Archan
gel, Russia.
British Bomb France
LONDON, Nov. lHAFy-British
planes bombed and .machine
gunned a , factory, warehouse,
freight train and railway yards in
FOU UFFCI771SSS
I ill II I irt TtDTiTTITl J
A WW
y
ZWU
Now-General Motors famous body sensation
I I I in '"iiiiiiuvrasftjiB k" aJt III
I I I 6KHKXAL MOTORS at AJTItPIICI mi . a . 0-s I I
mi thx jtxj cam with th low ma 101 combination of JrtTcd
1 1 1 7f0 y AYAILAtKAA SIX OS ANiCBT ItT AjTt MOBKI.
lifl fh ; - II
. . -.- aV 1 SBSBaBBSBSBBBBBaBaSBBBmBBSal
m m
Hew Pontfae Is Hdpinf America Prepart
PoeipnUNauosDceBMUtitolactioafiftt
in cauo fof dnU.1 Nary. To pm1 Aim aU-iaiDmiat' '
, nwK ill two
ctaftamaa wockiaa aiaat tad hmilAUg ..y tUi
aval Msthocitics aas- is "tba aaost aaatt vato of its aba
Nstioaal Dates viUMTclBai3a4.
V
Hnxl gooo ntwi for
moH mousands who hav
toe a; sulmiral thai rM..i
Motors body atyU pictured above:
ucaaumea seaaa -eoupe
is now avsiUbl for the first
. time fa Pontiac's Wrf SrAW line.
. - Patterned after the sensationally - '
popular, sod hi rner-tHr1 .
4J . tiac Streamlinet of last year, this
www m.vwm is inuinu mm
ither a sU or aa eight. At mm tight U
thitjmmtm, Wy UyUt
And, even more Important this
fear, the new Poatiacs ar av
chajascd where quality &ad long him
coons snost ia pittoay bearTos-t,
CTsnlcahafts nd TTTVTTrr potsv
n w t -
tax nas ea accoiapUabed wuh
out lntrfring with acf case needs.
- Tha &ricc ta arm u. .1
mVWVWU
235 S.
frif ;Ti i ti&tu Cts it Ism IE
Commercial St.
Salem. :
II il II CSAUTT actMMiaumi
-Oregon
...... t . .