The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 12, 1942, Page 10, Image 10

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    PAGE TEH
The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, June 12, 1942
Gas Dumped
On Streets
Lumber and Oil Trucks
Collide, People
Get Gasoline
SILVERTON More than 5000
gallons of gasoline was dumped on
the main highway in Silverton
Thursday morning when a large
gasoline truck and trailer collided
with a Silver Falls Timber com
pany truck. The accident hap
pened at the comer of Salem and
Grant streets and every one who
came with a container got gasoline
in quantity without benefit or ra
tion cards.
Everything from dippers to wash
tubs were used to sa vage the pre
cious liquid. One man brought a
gallon can and took it away in a
wheelbarrow.
The truck which dumped its
precious cargo holds between 1800
and 2000 gallons and the trailer
between 3200 and 3400 gallons,
making a total of more than 5000
gallons.
Dave Shafer was driving the
Silver Falls truck. The oil truck
was being operated for Lee & Es
tes of Portland.
Soil Erosion
Damage Told
PORTLAND, Ore., June U-JP)
Soil erosion is damaging 84 per
cent of the land in the Pacific
northwest, Regional Soil Conser
vator J. H. Christ said Thursday
. on arrival at his new headquarters
here.
Oregon's erosion losses are enor
mous, Christ said. The state's fail
ure to include more acreage in soil
conservation districts is due large
ly to failure to recognize the grav
ity of the problem, he said.
Washington has 10,000,000 acres
in districts, Idaho 6,000,000 and
Oregon only 1,000,000, he said.
Masons of Oregon
Elect Officers
PORTLAND, June ll-(yP)-The
Masonic grand lodge of Oregon
elected Clarence D. Phillips, Port
land, grand master at the closing
session of the 92nd annual state
meeting Thursday.
Other officers: Fred W. Hart
man, Portland, junior grand war
den; R. Edwin Pinney, Portland,
grand treasurer; D. Rufus Cheney,
Portland, grand secretary; Edward
D. Beatty, Corvallis, senior grand
deacon; Walter Ranson, Eugene,
junior grand deacon; Kohler Betts,
Athena, senior grand steward;
George Griffith, Portland, junior
grand steward; E. Leroy Hiatt,
Roseburg, grand standard bearer;
Cassius Humphreys, La Grande,
grand pursuivant; James Millar,
Portland, grand chaplain; John H.
Rankin, Portland, grand orator;
Enoch B. Carlson, Portland, grand
marshal, and Arthur Molesworth,
Portland, grand tyler.
Justice Douglas
In State Today
LA GRANDE, June 1 1 - 7P)
William O. Douglas, associate jus
tice of the US supreme court, will
arrive here Frfday for an extend
ed vacation in Oregon and Wash
ington. Mrs. Douglas with son and
daughter already were here. Con
siderable time will be spent at
their country place in Wallowa
country, they said.
The justice will address
the Oregon State Grange at Mil
waukie and the Oregon Newspa
p e r Publishers association at
Gearhart this month.
Beets Saved by
Japanese Labor
PORTLAND, Ore., June 11-(P)
"The 300 Japanese volunteer
workers in eastern Oregon sugar
eet fields were just enough to
rthe scales and save the crop,
B. Taylor cf Adams, chairman
Of the Oregon US department of
agriculture war "board, said Thurs
day. He told board members at their
meeting Thursday that of 21,000
cres of beets in the Nyssa area,
only 1000 had to be plowed un
der. Thinning work on the rest
wilLJbe completed within a week,
he said.
Economist Made Baron
LONDON, June ll.-;P)-John
Maynard Keynes, the internation
al economist and wartime advo
cate of "forced savings," Wed
riesday night was made a baron
the sole peer on the annual king's
birthday honors list.
4V K ?'n)' any men
Auxiliary Women's
'"TV TZimiS !flJ5z L - -- - - I
mmimmwmimmwmmmmMmmm
Girls replace men at a variety of duties in New Zealand. This picture
lauu au ivin immvu uu auuna wul vi hue luoucs ui vtuivu nuiucu lutvc irpi4CCa men. AIT IwrCc
officers have expressed great satisfaction with the excellence of performance of the women's auxiliary
In ground detail and technique. Members of the station parade personnel.
Fire Insurance
Of Federal War
Fire insurance agents are receiving notices of the impend-?'
ing start of the federal government's new war damage insurance
plan, which goes into effect July 1, according to Edward Rostein,
local insurance man. Sale of the government insurance, to be
handled through the private in
surance companies, is expected to
open around June 20.
A temporary system of free war
damage insurance now in effect is
to go out of existence on June 30.
The new insurance is to be
issuable covering public, com
mercial and residential build
ings and contents, railroads and
public utilities, property in
transit, manufacturing facilities
and plants, and vessels and
aircraft.
The Portland district office of
the US department of commerce
gives the following information
concerning the new insurance:
"It will be necessary for every
one who wants protection against
enemy attacks to make his appli
cation as soon as the necessary
blanks are available, because the
blanket protection now in force
will expire, by law, June 30.
"The program has been worked
out in cooperation with represen
tatives of the insurance industry,
and a great majority of those
writing fire insurance will par
ticipate. "Anyone wanting the protection
should contact his local fire in
surance agent or broker.
"The necessary manual of rates,
rules and regulations, and appli
cation blanks are being printed
and will be distributed through
out the United States on or about
June 20.
"The policies will be issued
for a 12-month period to cover
physical loss of real and per
sonal property which may re
sult from enemy attack or ac
tion of our own forces In re
sisting enemy attack.
"Blackout, sabotage, capture,
seizure, pillage, looting, use and
occupancy, rent, rental value, or
other indirect loss or consequen
tial damage will not be covered.
"Effort has been made to pro
vide reasonable protection at as
low a cost to the insured as possi
ble. Recognizing that losses oc
casioned by war are a national
problem, congress specified in its
legislation that rates for this pro
tection should be geographically
uniform, that is, the "rates to be
charged will be the same in the
middle of the United States as
they are on or near the coast.
"The following rates have been
established:
"Growing crops, 5 cents on $100;
farm buildings, dwellings, rural
and urban, including contents, 10
cents on $100.
"No coinsurance will Tie re
quired on farm buildings and
dwellings, but on all other prop
erty a 50 per cent coinsurance
clause will be required, with
fixed credits from the estab
lished rates for coinsurance
above 50 per cent.
"No protection will be given
for accounts, bills, currency,
deeds, evidences of debt, securi
ties, money and bullion. Jewelry,
furs, precious and semi-precious
stones, statuary, paintings, pic
tures, etchings, antiques, stamp
and coin collections, and 'manu
scripts will be protected for in
dividaul owners up to $10,000,
with a $5000 limit for any one
article. . . . Jewelry and furs up
to $1000 may be Included as
residential contents under .the
Air Force in New
Agents Learn
Damage Plan
Phi Beta Cop
Patrolman Frederick Joseph Lud
wig (above), first Phi Beta
Kappa to join the New York
city police force, jvas awarded
a master of science degree by
the College of the City of New
York. Ludwig, 23, reads and
writes Latin, Greek and French.
He supports a widowed mother
and a young brother.
ten-cent rate. Growing crops will
be protected up to $100,000 per
single, owner; pleasure watercraft
and aircraft up to $10,000, while
not in use. ...
"For the present, insurance
will be written in the continental
United States, Alaska, Hawaii,
Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and
the Canal Zone."
Loin Chops
lugar-Gitfed
Choice Cut Loin
Beef Steaks
Sausage, lb.
. -: ' '.
,J ' - .
1
mm
Ground ! 1 1 vS)
lb. tLia ZS
S A V I II G S Hill ILK '-FED
Choice
Cut
170
Ilcrih
Cca'l.
lb. L2 LA y lb. UJ ViS lb. t
Zealand Acclaimed
was taken at a Royal New Zea-
Canning Sugar
Signup Done,
West Salem
Virtually all the work of regis
tration for canning sugar in West
Salem district has been completed
according to W. B. Gerth, chair
man of ration board No. 27-3. He
announced Thursday that the
board, with the aid of volunteer
help and the cooperation of the
city of West Salem, has almost all
registrations in, cards nearly com
pletely filed and in order and most
reports sent in.
Fn commenting on the possibil
ity of doing the Job quickly and
efficiently, Gerth pointed out that
the work of his board, which takes
in 12 school districts, was aided
largely by the action of the West
Salem city council in giving over
the council rooms to the work for
the duration.
Registration in West Salem oc
cupied a half-day each on June
3, 4, 5, 6 and 8, Gerth said.
Monroe Youth Hit
Carrier at Midway
EUGENE, June ll-()-Lieut.
D. K. Carpenter, 21, Monroe, dis
closed Thursday as co-pilot of an
army B-17 bomber that scored
hits on a Japanese aircraft carrier
in the Midway island battle, is a
former Oregon State college stu
dent. He is the son of Tom Carpenter,
Corvallis, and Mrs. Blanche Car
penter, Sacramento, Calif.
McLeod Alternate
For West Point
WASHINGTON, June ll-(P)
Appointment of Andrew L. Frah
ler, Portland, to the US military
academy at West Point was an
nounced Thursday by Senator Mc
Nary (R-Ore.).
Alternates were Philip Carroll,
jr., Portland, first; Grady D.
Eeps, jr., Corvallis, second; and
Carl J. McLeod, Salem, third.
Grain Failed
o n o n
LTuLAa
Gorned leef
Sliced Young
LIVER,
All
Pork
lb.
27i
51 (Be
Assorted Sliced
Cold Heals
OUT OF THE WOODS
By JIM
The mass production of trees
by mechanized methods that's
the real idea of the Forest In
dustry Nursery on Nisqually
Flats, eight miles north of Olym
pia. Look easterly from the high
way, between the long hill and
the river bridge," and you can't
miss the show. Acres of overhead
sprinkler pipes crisscross land that
looks like gray-brown '. velvet
There's the tree mill, with . ten
million fir, hemlock, spruce and
cedar seedlings in production. .
Lumbermen and private for
est owners hare talked about
such a project for years. A
number of companies experi
mented with nurseries. They
had land areas which had been
burned by cigarette and other
forms of fiends in the forest.
These areas would have to be
planted or remain barren. But
the expense of a small, hand
worked nursery made the per
acre cost of planting too big to
bear. -
Timber growing by private en
terprise has to pay its way, it has
to be a real part of the timber
business, if it is to be more than
a name. At Nisqually seedlings
can be produced for a half-cent
each. Lumbermen and forest own
ers of the Douglas fir region have
joined together to provide a nurs
ery project large enough for ef
fective mechanized operation.
So it's a tree mill, planned, or
ganized and equipped for quan
tity production of tree seedlings,
as a sawmill is rigged up and
managed for the quantity produc
tion of lumber from trees. From
tree mill to sawmill runs a prom
ising new road of forest conserva
tion. .. Great care was taken in se
lecting seed stock last fall. Just
any old cones wouldn't do. They
were picked on sites known to
produce finest quality trees, and
at levels comparable to those
where they will be planted. High
level tree stock won't do well in
the lowlands, and stock from the
bottoms won't thrive up yonder.
The cones were threshed,' and
Draft Dodger
Trial Slated
PORTLAND, June am
resigning my citizenship," a Med
ford man wrote his draft board,
"don't bother me with any more
draft papers."
The trial of Fred W. Barfoot,
35, for failure to file his selective
service questionnaire, was set
Thursday by Federal Judge James
A. Fee for June 24, on Barfoot's
plea of innocent.
Barfoot earlier wrote that "I re
fuse to support this unconstitu
tional government," Deputy US
Attorney Edward Twining said.
Legion Auxiliary
To Present Flag
The American Legion auxiliary
will present a large American flag
to the Salem public library Sat
urday at 10 a. m. The organiza
tion will be represented by Mrs.
Frank Marshall, president, who
will make the presentation speech.
Librarian Hugh Morrow will re
ceive the flag, which will be dis
played in the reading room.
The presentation is part of the
auxiliary's community service
program, and is part of the Flag
week observance.
ib. Qlic
Pork
lb.
Choice
Backs
lb.
V E A L C UTS
Fehlnrkg
Inspected
Heals
Choice Boasls
2m
21?
For Tpo
ib. ilL a)c
STEVENS
the seeds cleaned of their wines,
by power machines. Dnrinr the
winter tests were made with
seed oil combinations, by
means of plantings made in
small separate units, all kept at
summer heat by electric soil
cables. Germination and growth
were scientifically charted, with
cases kept on each unit, as on a
patient in a . hospital bed. . The
best soil-seed combination
served as a scientific snide for
preparation of the nursery
ground, and for selection of the
seed to be planted.
One day in April Superintend
ent Charlie Reynolds and his crew
hitched up an odd-looking rig be
hind a tractor. It had the appear
ance of a double-barreled trench
mortar. One of the barrels held
compressed air, while the other
was primed with chloropicrin
tear gas to you and me. The boys
donned regulation gas masks and
away they went down the field,
pumping tear gas, into the soil.
As soon as the guns had gassed
one of the rows, the overhead
sprinkling system was turned on
and the ground given a good wet
ting sealing the gas into the soil.
Seems that the gas kills all of the
weed roots and most of the weed
seeds. Three days or so later the
soil was opened up and the gas
was given the air.
Then, the mechanical drill,
planting at the rate of a thousand
seeds a minute . . . Next fall a
mechanical ground loosener will
dig up the trees. Quick-fingered
girls in the nursery warehouse
will sort, cull and tie them into
bundles, ready for the forest . . .
Out in the woods, on industry
lands which have been burned
over, planting crews will be ready,
with more machines and more
science . . . Some day loggers will
come again, and the long haul
from tree mill to sawmill will be
completed.
CORN Albers Pkg.
FLAKES Kellogg's
PORK and BEAIIS ; kiv' 180 M 120
SPAGHETTI or
rnnTT
UUUli Cream Style, Garden Brand
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE
PICTSWEET PEAS
KRISPY CRACKERS
HI-HO CRACKERS
DOG FOOD Gro-Pup
TISSUE 650-Sheet Rolls
POWDERED I1ILK
IVORY FLAKES
IVORY SOAP
COFFEE We Have a Complete Stock of Vacuum Pack
FRUIT PECTIII Bulk Qt. 290 Gal.
CABBOTS
Bulk
90
lbs... ...
0BAIIGES
Sweet
290
doz.
caiits
2 for 45c
size.
230
BUTTEI1-BEAIIS
Seaside Brand, Mb. tin.
2
270
for:
GEraroT 0LE0
2 ibk390
W3E
"Bucking
Hi Prices"
Three Welding Schools Here
Send 50 Monthly to Shipyard
Three welding schools axe now being operated in Salem on
a 24-hour schedule, turning out an average of 50 fully trained
workers each month. Seven thousand more welders are needed
for the Portland area by September and additional registrations
are
being encouraged, according
to supervisors.
The schools are located in the
alley back of Ladd & Bush build
ing where O. "Johnny" Bushnell,
director, is. found during the
morning; the second is at the sen
ior high school and the third at
Chemawa. All are under general
direction of C. A Guderian, local
supervisor of defense training.
Registrations may be made at the
United States employment service
office, 710 Jerry street, or with
Bushnell.
. The class work is giVen at
the rate of six hours a day and
as soon as the worker can pass
the shipyard test he is qualified
for the full time Job and pay.
Men employed during the day
are able to fit the class work
into their regular schedule and
irany who work at the canton
ment during the day are taking
PLAIN
OR
IODIZED
5C
2 for
9c
Pkg. 50
Kellogg's
MACARONI
No. 303
46-Oz.
AIRMAIL
Lb . . 20c
3 lbs. 59c
IIOBIIIIIG STAB
Lb. . ... . 28 c
3 lbs. 83c
hills nnos.
Lb. .....34c
nun
Tall Cans Oregon
fer
case......
$3.84
Alpine, Carnation, Pet,
Borden's, Special, Morn-
per case $3.94
f JUST WINK! IT&
STZZ0s. ) WIRE-HINGED SPOUT
jvon't TEAR OUT J
0
GOITEE
the training.
Many men who took the work
during recent months and for
some reason did not seek em
ployment with the shipyards are
now being sought out for these
jobs because of special need.
The work Is not heavy and
among graduates of the local
schools are several one-armed
men who are holding full time
Jobs now. Herbert Kling, for
merly of West Salem, who lost
a hand in an industrial accident
several years ago, recently com
pleted the course and b now
employed.
John Long, a 19-year-old stu
dent at the school, completed his
work and passed the shipyard
tests in 125 hours. He is employ
ed as a foreman at one of the
Portland shipbuilding companies.
J ccM
pfkgs .l c
WATERMELONS
Lb. S(S
Pkg. iL 2C
Franco
American Ea. 1 JL 0
4Aa Case
Cans, Ea. LVP $2.13
230
300
Tins
Ea.
cans
for
2-Lb. Pkg. 310
l-Lb. Pkg. 220
ng. 250
4 for 190
lbs. for 390
Reg. Size Pkg. 240
Large Size Bars 100
$1.09
IF
ill
CASTLE
BRAND
49 lb
$1.37
KITCHEN QUEEN OR
RED, WHITE AND
KL... $1.79
CROWN, FISHER
BLEND, DRIFTED
$1.90
GOLD -MEDAL
rVff
49 lb. ... PaaU&
LEiions
2 doza.. 190
WHITE onions
3 ihL ii 100
137 So.
Cenl
H PI a A-. :
7311
- v. -.
L0UB