The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 11, 1942, Page 7, Image 7

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    Tho OBEGOXi STATESMAN. SALEM. Oragba, Weiaeaday Morning. February 11, 1842
PAGE CEVEII
Junior Glub Members Make Plans for
TV .f i ir i ' tirm r- I
neception, to Assist
members have many activities
scheduled for February and plans
were made at the regular busi
ness session held Monday night
at the club house.
An outstanding .event of the
month will be the formal recep
tion honoring Mrs. Saidie Orr '
Dunbar, honorary ; president of
the General Federation of Wo
men's clubs, to be held Monday
night. February 23, at the dub
. house. Miss Dorothy L. Cornel
ius heads the directorate for the
affair and all club members will
act as hostesses to the guests, in
cluding : members jf visiting
clubs and Salem women, prom
inent in club circles.
Members voted to donate $25
toward the Leslie school milk
fund, which provides milk daily
for 100 children who can not get
it elsewhere. They also voted to
donate $30 to the Marion county
health department to be used to
purchase glasses for needy chil
dren. This work is under the
direction of the club's public
welfare department, Mrs. Clin
ton Standish, chairman.
Miss Hattie Bratzel, first vice
president and national defense
chairman of the club, was elect-
Auxiliary -Feted
at
Dinner
Mn. L. O. Clement, Mrs. J.
Bay Pemberton and Mrs. M. C.
Findley entertained the Tri
County Medical auxiliary at a
6:30 o'clock dinner meeting
Tuesday night at the former's
home on North 17th street
Mrs. W. Wells Baum presided
at the business session and the
group made layettes for the Red
Cross during the evening. Mrs.
Bernice Skinner, supervisor of
Hursts, Marion county depart
ment of health, was the guest
speaker and discussed new de
velopments in county health
work and emergency stations.
Attending were Mrs. W. Wells
Baum, Mrs. F. E. Brown, Mrs.
Grover Bellinger, Mrs. K. J.
Clements, Mrs. Hugh Doud, Mrs.
C. A. Downs, Mrs. Carl Em
mons, Mrs. E. E. Getziaff, Mrs.
Irvine Hill, Mrs. Stuart Lance
field, Mrs. Thomas Dunham,
Mrs. Vernon A. Douglas, Mrs.
William , Lidbeck, Mn. J. Ray
Pemberton, Mrs. John Ramajre,
Mrs. Wilmer Smith; Mrs. Fred
erick Hill Thompson, Mrs. Wil
lard N. Thompson, Mrs. George
Williamson, Mrs. R. Lee Wood,
Mrs. Horace Miller, Mrs. Ray
Waltz, Mrs. Paul Wolfe, Mrs.
B. F. Wilnams, Mrs. Charles
Campbell, Mrs. M. C. Findley
and Mrs. L. O. Clement
SILVERTON Silverton Wo
man's club patriotic rally was
held Monday afternoon as part
of the regular Woman's club
program for February. Mrs.
George Hubbs was hostess chair
man assisted by Mrs. A. B. Wies
ner, Mrs. L. C. Eastman, Mrs. Os
car E. Lee, Mrs. George Jaesche
and Mrs. Edwin Severance.
Mrs. Hubert Goode of Port
land, ,. prominent in American
Legion auxiliary work and club
work in Oregon,, was the guest
speaker. Mrs. Goode spoke on
defense work and urged that the
American w.omen realize the
Today's Menu
Jellied salad begins a1 meal
that includes a special dessert.
Jellied fruit salad !
Meat balls, mushroom gravy
Corn and beans , ;
- - Hot corn sticks
Spiced cottage pudding
SPICED COTTAGE PUDDING
(Using Buttermilk)
1ft cups flour
1 teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Yt teaspoon cloves
teaspoon nutmeg
V teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla'
M cup sugar
cup buttermilk
1 egg, beaten (or 2 yolks)
S tablespoons fat, melted
Mix ingredients and beat two
minutes. Pour into shallow pan
lined with wax paper and bake
25 minutes in moderate oven
(350 ; degrees).
HARD SAUCE
Is cup butter
2 tablespoons hot cream,
. Ym teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
Ya teaspoon almond extract
1 egg, beaten '
2 cups confectioner'f sugar
Mix ingredients ' and beat "a
minute. Let stand five minutes,
beat unta very creamy. Pile up
in bowl and chilL Sprinkle with
cinnamon. :
Plm Defense Tax
TODAY
Uhm Wayne, Betty Field ta
- Harold BeD Wright s.
Stcphsrd d
tie
lis nab" ;
In Technicolor
AND SECOND FEATUKS
Victor McLaglan - Zasu Pitts
witn burvey
the General Federation Victory J
April 27 to May 2. Mrs. Delbert
-Schwabbauer was elected as the
alternate delegate.
1 , Elected to membership in the
club were Mrs. Maurice Bren
nen, Mrs. Bert A. Walker and
Mrs. Fred Gast.
The following members have
volunteered their services in the
coming survey of women's skills.
to begih February 16 in Salem:
, Mrs. Talbot Bennett, Mrs. Joseph
V. Tompkins, Mrs. Joseph Fel-
ton, Mrs. Fred Gast, Mrs. Mau
rice' Brennen, Mrs. Clinton
Standish; Mrs. M. H. Saffron,
Mrs. Roy Mink, Mrs. Delbert
Schwabbauer and Mrs. Thome
H. Hammond.
"Man-Made Textiles and Tex
tile Finishes' was the subject
presented to club members and
guests following the business itentiary probably will cut ap
meeting by Miss Frances Clinton, I proximately 2500 cords of wood,
Marion county's new home dem
onstration agent. Miss Clinton
discussed rayon, nylon, vinyon,
casein fiber, soybean fiber and
fiberglass, showing samples of
the various products, and ex
plaining the care and durability
of the textiles.
dangerousness and seriousness
of the war situation. Mrs. Goode
was introduced by Mrs. F. M
Powell, local woman's club de-
fense chairman.
Mrs. Edwin Severance re-
4w v, a a-
JVt !Vt MM! w) MIC VsAAA ViU V.
tion agent for Marion county had
now been obtained and that the
local club was one of the insti
gators of the move to obtain a
home demonstration agent for
this county.
Announcement was made of
me marcn meeting wiiicu wui
be "men's night," and Mrs. W.
Clark Bachman was named as
chairman of the dinner for that
night
Mrs. Kaipn juarson, presiaeni,
opened the meeting, and Mrs.Jdistrict superintendent of thi
Tom Anderson led in group
singing.
DALLAS At a Saturday
luncheon given at their Flower
Acres home in Troutdale, Mr.
and Mrs. William Mitchell an-
nounced the engagement of their
daughter. Miss Mary Elizabeth I
Ward, to Lt James G. White,
US army air corps, son of Mrs.
W. K. White of Lubbock, Texas.
At each place was a minia
ture airplane, and on the wings
were lettered the names of the
betrothed couple.
Miss Ward attended Pacific I
university and is a graduate of
the Oregon College of Educa
tion. She is a teacher in Dallas.
Lt White attended Brown
wood college in Brownwood,
Texas. He received his commis
sion in October at Mather field,
Sacramento, where he is now
an instructor
Bidden to
me mncneon were
Mrs. John K. Voth, Mrs. Ralf
nnsetn, Mrs. neroert wutzKe,
Mrs. J. tj. fieasant, miss mu
dred Quigley, Miss
Marjorie
Ashby, Miss Dortha Young, Miss
Margaret Lindahl, Miss Gene
vieve Coad, Miss Esther Cleve
land, Miss Mildred Schneider,
Miss Ruth Holbrook, Miss Eliza
beth Grant, Miss Helen Shreeve,
Miss Ruth Betts, Miss George
Gould, jr., all of Dallas, and
Mrs. George Lindberg, Mrs.!
William Worrall and Mrs. Wil
liam Demme of Portland.
Lincoln Couple
Hear of Birth
LINCOLN Word has been re
ceived by Mr. - and Mrs. Alvin
Walling, Lincoln, of the birth of
a son to Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Walling, Seattle.. Walling is an
employe of Boeing field and re
ceived his high school education
at Salem. He is a son of the Alvin
Wallings.
Genevieve Ashford, daughter of
the Ward Ashfords. spent four
days with her sister and brother-
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Dye in
Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Ashford had
as their guest from Aberdeen, SD,
Ashford 's brother-in-law, Irl N.
West- ''
Always 2 Smash Hits
TODAY and THURSDAY
i A UNIVERSAL !CTUtg
WITH
UIPE LEON
VELEZ
ERROLI
Plus 2nd " Smash H
. . A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
NEWS and COMEDY
State Control
i . .--.,.
Board Ponders
PniVPf I 51 Tl
The state board of control will
not act hastily on the proposals
of the Bonneville administration
and the Portland General Electric
company, involving power elec
tric rates for state buildings in
the Salem area, the board indi
cated at a meeting here Tuesday,
The board said a careful study
would be made of both proposals.
The board also Indicated that
it would later approve a pro
posal to accept the Baker nata
toiium for use as a state ar
mory there. The board was ad
vised that $25,009 would be re
quired te remodel the struc
ture. The city would give the
naiaiorium building to the
state.
The board approved a proposal
whereby inmates of the state pen
to be distributed among state in
stitutions in the Salem district
and the boys' training school at
Woodburn.
Warden George Alexander esti
mated that the wood could be de-
livered at the institutions in the
isaiem area at $4 a cord, including
payment of SO cents a day to the
convicts for their labor.
Contracts for furnishing ap
proximately 13,000 barrels of fuel
oil to the state during the cur-
rent year were awarded to the
Automatic Oil Burner Distribu-
J ,KPeleun fT22Z
and the Tidewater Associated Oil
company On the basis of 10 cents
a barrel above the early 1941
quotation.
i Church Situation
Jn ar Revealed
At Club Program
"No institution in America
stands to lose more from war than
the church." Tir j vAaT. t,i.
Methodist church. HpdarpH i an
address before the Kiwanis club
Tuesday,
1U xunaamental features of
brotherhood, good will, service
and democracy are in direct op-
Position to the struggle that Is
now being carried on, the speaker
Pomtea out.
'However, now that we are at
war it is the three-fold task of
the church to keep alive spiritual
values, stand behind democratic
institutions and prepare for the
coming of peace."
Named on Survey
LYONS Mrs. Ralph Senders,
Albany, Linn county chairman of
the board of mobilization of
women of Linn county has ap
pointed Mrs. Alex Bodeker as
cahirman of the Lyons district
Mrs. Bodeker has appointed the
following helpers, Mrs. Norman
Garrison. Mrs. Orville Downin.
Mrs. Earl Allen, Mrs. Jack Corn.
jforth, Mrs. Helen Bauer and Mrs
Bert Lyons,
"BUT DEFENSE BONDS'
-!! a m I
zsM U-1 li :n
r- i
HURRY! 2 MORE DATS!
9 Ob Tb Scrwmmt
COMPANION FEATURE
llirsinippi Gnilcr'
Kent Taylor, Frances Langford
FLU 8 HIS -LATEST
THUIUH9I
ixcrwo
BillUm
Dollar Limited
PLUS SPECIAL
VIVID!! STARTLING!!
"WAR CLOUD8 IN
THE FACD71C"
COMING FRIDAY
Alexander Damns' Moat
AMAZING ADVENTURE
ROMANCE!
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., in
QiHUKICtt
fMARCH-SCOTT
JL J
A1ttlNrSlS0SM(T.ll
STJUH SONM S0 tOCKHMT
IAUM MOPS Ctm 6MMT MOCMCU
KracHS Sf IKVmS RArTUE -
v ' - 1
5
Or
STARTS "X
TONIGHT r N
COMPANION IXATCSX
" " It's a Riot! See
"Carole Lombard
in
True Confessions"
with Fred MacMurraj.
John Barrymore
Dies in Action
s s -
Cecil Glass (above), foster son of
Mr. and Sirs. Howard Good-
fellow of Zena, was killed in
action January Zi in the Phllip4
pine Islands, according to a mes
sage from the war department.
Glass, who was serving In com
munications with Gen. MacAr
thur's .forces, attended schools
at Zena and Bethel and . was
well ftueowa In Oregon City.
Rites Held for
Accident Victim
-
CLOVERDALE Funeral ser
vices for Marion Cook, 47, were
held Tuesday at the Turner Chris
tian church. He was killed Friday
while working at a lumber yard
at West Fir.
Marion Cook, son of Mr. and
T.m.aa ...am linm An)
raised in this community but had
lived at West Fir for a number of
years. He is survived by the wi
dow. Mrs; Jessie Cook: a daugh-
ter. Mrs. Harold Smith, and his
father and mother, all of West Fir.
a brother, Earl, and sister, Leona,
and an aunt, Mrs. Nellie Miller,
and cousins, Walter and Fred
Miller, of this community.
Candy Sale Fund
Goes for Prizes
SILVERTON Brown sugar.
honey and molasses will be feat
ured in the candy sale which the
Silverton Woman's club will hold
in conjunction with the annual
hobby show February 13. The
proceeds of the candy sale will go
toward prizes for the show. W.
Clark Backman is in charge of the
sale.
Another indication of war times
will be the Boy Scouts' black-out
demonstration under the super
vision of J. J. Lewis. In this the
youths will do their knot-tying
and bandaging blindfolded.
EGBOOOCD
TODAY
n
Greatest
Htm c3n
a
-r ,
la the History of
Motion Pictures!
Released by the
United States
Navy!
"Pearl
Harbor
Bombed"
The Camera
Story of the Das
tardly Jap At
tack on O ur
Peaceful Pacific
Islands
Lorttta Yotag
THE MEN Dl HER
UTET
and
Chester Morris
-' "Confeaaiona c4
Boston Zktdd
Clark : ; Lana ;
Gable ! Turner
; "EQUXY TOUT
TWO CI A TAXT1
Baakv: 14a,
i u . Mi 1mj Ida, 4M,
I ave. Se I BlacUe: J
I nmm Tajt :, M
I TODAY, i
Mat lie
Eva. Z2
Fhn Tax
4.-0S. T.-O. IS I
Taxi: XMi
Forestry Men
To Keep Jobs
As Observers
Aircraft observers required to
man forest service lookout stations
will be obtained from the ranks
of regular forest service employes
and will be on a 12-month sched
ule instead; of being employed
only during the fir season, the
Oregon state defense council has
been advised by the second in
terceptor command.
Persons on duty before the
opening of the fire season prob
ably will continue on through the
summer in the dual capacity of
fire .lookouts and aircraft observ
ers, Jerrold Owen, state civilian
defense coordinator, said.
Road Zoning
I -rj - o
UleS 066II
Confidence mat the governor,
with the aid of the attorney gen
eral, can find in existing statutes
sufficient authority to permit
establishment by him of some
type of zoning regulations along
roads outside municipal areas in
the state was expressed by the
Benton County Roadside De
fense council at its meeting Mon
day in Corvallis, County Judge
Grant Murphy reported here
Tuesday.
Cooperation from private land
owners is also to be sought in an
attempt to protect roadsides from
mushroom growth of unsightly
building or undesirable business,
Murphy said.
"ayesville L,onples
I Parents of Sons
I
HAYES VILLE A son, Doug
John, was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Brown February
at a local hospital. A boy was born
Saturday at th eDeaconess hospi
tal to Mr. and Mrs. Warren James.
The boys of scout troop 20 were
entertained Thursday at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. George Strozute,
The boys tied the paper they had
received from their drive. Into
bundles. Refreshments were serv
ed by Mrs. Strozute, assisted by
Mrs. Lyle Carrow.
tCE Oulx C.nte.lantu CeUte teffl iM
wWZSkT Inonah
fL N X Jw V.l I S a
vi v s i b-i iri y sz
m :-Bfc as-aia-atBr Mm m m a ibbi. -i-
I J 1 1 I I I
::xrflytJ oil
Vi, Sa 9 sl L il
la You Xtxrici 15,CC3 Kilts t! 7ixt List I
No. this Isn't a war map. It's a map showing there's a
lot more to this electric business than grinding out
Kwer at a dam or steam plantl FrmmpeFGEhM
d to spend more than $1200,000 for transniission
and distribution lines to carry electricity to all parti of
the 2500-aquare-oiile area we serve. (This Is an area
biager than the state of Connecticut.) If you took all
our distribution wire, and strung it together, it would
reach from Portland to-Moscow and back again! The
15,000 miles of distribution wire weighs more dan
14,000,000 pounds, and Is strung on 128,802 poles.
LU:s Itfrirt Ccsilnt niiiititsc. cw
climbs a PGE tower at West Unn. above Willamette
Falls. Some people think our Job is done when we build
a line. But this crew knows that this Is only the begin
ning. Like a highway, an electric line requires constant
repair and maintenance work. When traffic increases
greatly on a certain highway, the state hasto widen the
road and straighten out the curves. Electric "traffic"
has been greatly increased on PGE lines, tooand this
requires our putting in heavier wire, larger trans
formers, bigger insulators, new poles, and countless
other changes. During the past two years, electric "traf
fic" on our lines has Increased 28 per cent .
Year "round, crews must constantly patrol lines, trim
overhanging trees, "-place broken insulators, replace
decayed poles . . . and stand ready to work day and
night, repairing storm damage.
e r"
Service Men
Where They Art
What Thoy're- Doing
Fred A. WcdeL Richard Gehring
aria Melvin J. Almos, all of Sa
lem; Kenneth H. Siegmund, Stay-
ton, and Lewis R. Kelley, Inde
pendence, ! have Joined the - ma
rines. ' .
Recent army recruits include
Omar E. Jesten, Verne R. Jones,
Charles T. Prest, William J. Pe
terson, Carl W. Kuescher, Carl
E. McLaughlin, all of Salem, and
Ray . Phillips, West Salem.
CLO VERALE a e n e Shilling
was sworn into the army In the
para troop division last Tuesday.
Shilling is the first young man of
this community to Join as a para
chutist He was sent to Fort Lewis
with his : farther destination un
disclosed.
PEDEE Harley .Edwards of I
navy unit stationed in Alaska vis
ited his uncle, Lafe Edwards and
family Thursday. He was accom
panied by his mother, Mrs. Al
Edwards, and his sister, Mrs. For
est Shaw, Philomath. Edwards is
here on a four-day furlough.
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 10-A)
Administering the oath of alle
giance to 385 navy recruits Tues
day, Lieut. Com. Gene Tunney
said:
"You are dedicating yourselves
on this, Wake Island day, to those
385 fighting men who have writ
ten across the pages of our his
tory a story that will never be
forgotten."
Officials said it was the largest
single group ever inducted into
the US navy.
"You young men are being giv
en the privilege oi bearing our
standard to the seven seas," said
Com. Tunney. "Do it as another
answer to the barbaric butchery
of the Japs. Do it as proof that
we are not soft and flabby and
cowardly, as the Japs have said."
Talbot Woman Visits
TALBOT Mrs. Ernest Freeman
and her sister, Mrs. J. D. Whining
ton of Portland, visited relatives
in Cottage Grove and Eugene
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Portland to tloscou
r
X
"Ctctddrr ttat Ct 112-n
ram ,1st Calf X3c a Bay"
"Current at PGE rates is
the biggest bargain on bit
place." says; Robert If.
Harper, Salem. "Just 23c a
day, on the average, buys
enough electricity at PGE's
low rates to do all these
Jobs and more; Operate a
; horsepower deep-well
pump- to irrigate various
crops; barn and milk house
equipment;, household
eqsiprsent, c-rjdstinf of a
refrigerator, a radios, etc
Marion Gels
Forest Fund
Marion county receives 13171.-
59 as Its share of forest reserve
receipts from ML Hood and Wil
lamette forests for 1941, a report
released Tuesday reveals. ;
Largest i stipend from forest
funds to any mid-valley county
is the $7863.51 allotted to Linn
county from Willamette ; forest,
while Polk: receives $27.68 from
the Siuslaw forest Marion coun
ty includes 206,337 acres' of land
in the two forests; 451,118 acres
of the Willamette reserve lie In
Linn county. "
Twenty-five per cent of the re
ceipts front forest reserve rentals,
sales of timber of other forest
ventures for the year ending
June SO, 1941, allotted by the fed
eral government to the state is
included In the apportionment in
accordings with statutory provi
sions. Total of the sum divided
among the counties Is $183,838.17.
Slate Salvage
Chief Named
Gov. Charles A. Sprague Tues
day announced the appointment
of Claude L Sersanous, Portland,
as chairman of the state salvage
committee.
The proposed salvage campaign
is to be conducted by the bureau
of industrial conservation of the
war . production board through
state and county defense coun
cils.
Governor Sprague said the full
committee' organization would be
announced later.
Sersanous is an equipment
dealer and is chairman of the ag
ricultural committee of the Port'
land chamber of commerce.
Four Babies Born
SILVERTON Four babies, one
boy and three girls, were born at
the Silverton hospital during the
week-end. Girls were born to Mr.
and Mrs; ; Ralph Rucker, Wood-
burn, and to Mr. and Mrs. N. Van
Driesche, St Paul, both on Sat
urday, and to Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Wavra oh Sunday. The lone boy
was born to Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Hanson, Woodburn, on Friday.
the omstcer is ne .1 yur
PGE line toleach f roi
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm0mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm iiiwi i' v
. :
Iff yjX--'"
VINNERS
8 to 12 YEARS
S7
rax aajvest anoncw vacation
NLLT K. AUJOUNT. N. K. ISO.
jdimt lAtirt, lis if. . ea, rwt. -.f
fctad: ROBJtRT L. BREAK. SM S X. .
vTZxnoc, PorUaad; 8H1RLET ROTH ;
CARETTBos 41 Dyto; BUD KNO
STAJCE. S41S N. K. Alat Ava rortiaaa;
: . sixacrr lamts .
CAROLTK BALktX, SIS It. K. SMa, Fart,
lata; aiKALDTNS BOWLES, S33S K. B. :
Ur An., rartlaaa; VIVIAN BRAT.
om k. vn&tt. rasuaaa: UTH CARL
BCRO, BaaU V Camky; KLBAKOA
OOBJCAJt, 1S4 tC Fmt St, Sataa;
ALAN JAN BCf. 177S Sir St., Satnai;
DOKKA'RUTB JOHNSOK, SS1S K. B.
ta A rsctiaaa: bettx lanodon.
Roots Sv Voesorwi rLORurca ANNS
atcKEMRT. 113 a E. S4U An, Tort
laas; BARBARA MlDEXHAUl
. B. Tajtoc Ct, Pwrtlaaa: PATRICIA
atoaHER, nat a w. 4ta a Maita,
- aBa; DOKAU OBRTSit, RU U. U
vankls; KORKA OSWALD, MC Aaal;
XYALTIf rKORSON, TS21 It. B. Evwstt
SC. PortlaM; CLARA STEPHENS, Oar
4m Bona: IUrra STEWART? 1S
Boots ComawelaL Salsai: VIRGINIA -TULLTS,
7J1 a E; Dufca Bt Pertlaaa:
HARRIET VAHET, Routs S, PorUaaA;
MtRlali WILI.IA 7745 N. B. S4th Arm.,
Pottataa: RICHARD WXATT IMS S.
Caaica, Busav.
. mrt-XTTXia ALARK rijftCKS
CART LOUUiS BAKAJt. SS13 N. H!fM
aa PartlaaA:
last attata S Baton: LOREN DODGB.
niMi lOrfNtnH. Koala 1. cnahaa:
JKANNS U LAKFER. Kmtm I, Cult
Crssk: BSJfNTB M. M-1WN, Rswta S.
SA, Kwkwc: MARY ELLEN fTBO"Y,
KataI!a;.U BflM BAjyai. ""
.44f aastaawi at Maasiioav BMCOSk
vniiYQ, aiomt Aasw; Tajja. -
Van Winkle May
Seek Supreme
Bench, Report
Reports have been persistent
here for several days that L H.
Van Winkle is being urged to en
ter the contest for justice 'of the
state supreme court at the pri-
mary election, c. . v - ' :. t- -,x
Incumbents whose terms expire
early - next January are Justices
James T. Brand, Harry Belt and
Percy Kelly They are expected
to seek reelection.
Silverton Man
Taken by Death
SILVERTON Everett Jenks
Bailey died1 at his home on 308
Bight street Tuesday. He was
born on September 14, 1898 -in
South Dakota.
His survivors are his widow,
loilua Bailey-and a daughter,
Alice Bailey, both of Silverton.
Funeral arrangements are to
be announced later by Larson
and Son funeral home.
Call Board
EXSINOKK
Today Bergen and McCarthy, sibber
hcum ana mout in ixxk wdo i
LauKhina."
Kent Taylor and rranc
Lanatord in
jamusippi wmottr,"
Friday Douglas Fairbanks and Akim
Tamlrofx in "Cortican Brothers."
William Tracy la "Hay Foot"
GRAND
Today LAMtta Young. Conrad Veldt.
Deaa jagger ana jonn aneppera in
The Men in Her Life." Chester
Morris and Harriet Hilliard in "Con
fession of Boston B tackle."
STATE
Today Jack Benny and Kay Francis
' in Cnrne Aunt. James uieason
and William Tracy in "Tanks a
Million."
CAPITOL
Today Fredric March and Martha
Scott in "One Foot in Heaven."
Carole Lombard and Fred MacMur-
ray in "True Confession. "
Saturday John Garfield in "Danger
ously They Live." "Hopalong" Big
Boyd in "Outlaws of the Desert."
BOLLYWOOD
Today John Wayne. Betty Field and
Harry Carey in "Shepherd of the
Hills." Victor McLaglen. Dennis
O'Keefe. Zasu Pitts, and Patsy Kelly
in "Broadway Limited
Thursday Ronald Coleman and Anna
Lee in "My Life With Caroline."
Red Barry in "Wyoming Wildcat."
LIBERTY
Today Lupe Velez and Leon Fr
rol in "Six Lessons From Madame
La Zonga." Johnny Mack Brown in
"Law and Order.
Friday Roy Rogers in "Rough Riders
Round-up." Dead End Kida in "Hit
the Road."
Febratainr Quiz Questfn
anfl Back!
IN SECOND MONTHLY
TGt QUIZ" CONTEST j
I -11 TO 18 YEARS!
Bcoa suivcst strmm vacation -
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BERT SYDNEY HUGHES, JS44 BrsaA
war. Bate: EDWARD LEWIS. Rsa
1. Warrsa; ESTHER OLSON, S8OT N. B
TnVsiSoA, FniaasT LUCILLE RIEBEN.
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