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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1942)
TAGS' TWO Tht CZZGOU STATZCMAIl, Cclem. Oroa Sunday Morciag, September 6. ISU ydod Barracks Pre-FaKricaied Type To Replace Metal Huts for Army , . , . SEATTLE, Sept S-AVT h e War department, Saturday award- . ed a contract for construction here of between one and five million dollars worth, of a new type of . ; pre-fabricated barracks, made al most exclusively of Pacific North- . west forest products. , . ; . . . .The structures .were conceived .by Frank Hobbs, president of the Colotyle corporation, - manufac ' turers t pre-finished wall boards. '' He heads a new company, Pacific Huts, which has been incorpo rated to manufacture them. The new barracks, which are de-1 signed to replace the aocalled Quonset metal huts developed by the navy, are of the same size, 38 by 18 feet, and have the same C f. semi-cylindrical shape which has given them the name "Igloos. Except for bolts which lire used to fasten sections together and a few other metal fittings they are made entirely ' of lumber and ' . Dressed wood. --' ' .- Hobbi said they .will be turned out on an assembly line plan in a new plant which is expected to be i in production in a few weeks. "Every 1000 huts will save 30,- ' 000,000 pounds of steel," Hobbs I said. "The same number will save ' 800,000 box car hours, ; .formerly T used to transport, the metal huts' from Quonset, RI, Jto the west ' coast In addition, they save about half the labor that; went into the J . . metal hvtavv i . -( r I "Every section is thoroughly in sulated and the. huts won't frost through from the Interior like . metal ones. On the other hand. 1 the huts are equally, well adapted to use in the tropics.; Every piece has been dipped In termite, resist-1 Ing fluid." " ..; " ; Gable Shows As Real Man, In Training MIAMI BEACH. FLA- Sept 5 . -LTVClark Gable gave proof Sat vrday that he is as good a soldier In Uncle Sam's army as he once was a top-flight actor In Holly wood. . After nearly a month of train !ng as an officer candidate in the air corps school here. Gable was permitted to pose for photograph ers and .answer questions, asked Informally by newspapermen. v Lleut-Col. Charles H. McNair, director of the officer candidate gchool, praised Gable as a soldier. . "He has- been shown no- special 'consideration and has asked none.' aid the Colonel. 'He started near ly 10 days behind the class- but has nearly caught-up. His class mates have elected . him to the honor committee, Which enforces . rules of honor and conduct. Ho is n efficient soldier" Gable: 10 pounds lighter than when he entered the -service end heavily sun-tanned,- la 'enjoying . his new life. .This is good," he aaid on the athletic field, clad in shorts -and perspirinf ; profusely under the tropical sun. .This puts you , In shape. I weigh 185 now end have more muscle than I had.. . He Isn't thinkiag of his Jnotlon picture career "until all this Is over," he told reporters. His ap ,'pearanceiiaa changed slightly. He la leaner -and beads of perspira-1 uon sumo wnere-a zameua mus tache Once was. . Gable Jumped hurdles, climbed scaling walla -and ran around an Inclined board track with a dozen classmates, y .S. v:. ;- .V "He is a real man. aside from being a national , character," said Colonel McNair. "He takes the bumps and hurdles . with the rest. That's what we demand uv the B7.,, v - First Yankee AcesTNoted fc LONDON, Sept. -S--US array headquarters announced Saturday that Second Lieuts. Joseph Shaf fer, of Long Beach, Calit; " and Dza Shahan, of St George, W. Vsl, were the first Americans to -shoot down a German aircraft in "the European- war .theatre. Both -are 24 years old. ' ' - ' They shot down Tocke-Wulf Kurier bomber over Iceland - Au gust 14, Previously Second Lieut. Sam T. Junkin had been credited with the first victory, the destruc uon ot i Focke-wuu 180- -over Dieppe. r ' " . - snaner ana snanaa were awarded the silver star, at their base In Iceland last Thursday. Coast Guard Fliers Find 5C3 Suryivbr. WASJIINGTON, Eept The coast guard reported Satur day that. iii-.Xierj' located ;SS3 , surivor of torpedoed ships, from 'U-rr-Vcr-.T.'tO' June : 21 while cr-lcl 2iZ,Z'jl. rIes cn patrol. In -addition, 27. badly tinjured tn?n were picked up at sea and : f- : pcrtei .-.sphere ; to - hospital- TO 'KFNT J-bedrnl. . . n., mod. Eox i7X, SuHesman. US Troops in S llfillllllff I- . F i m r f lAtlanticiy i Ocean EQUATOR 500 i 1000 -4 STATUTE MILES Arrival f US troops la Belgian nf ALGERIA V 7 I Si FRENCH WEST AFRICA J III vk .J yB'A ify yuuuu Gibraltar add to a ease of Afrteaa Jitters fer the axis. Secensl cluding back doer drives on German-held Libya er Dakar, pins perhaps British saa-berne lnvaalea of Tunisia er Dakar, The American army technical forces which arrived at LeopoldvUle, Belgian Conge capital, started Immediately to tion for further troop arrivals. French Actress X Mlchele Morgan, Preach actress and Wmiam Marshall actor Sleense ta Ln Anreles. . They wlB she sakL She gave her axe as -:'r;i' "V " ' " i ' " ' '" ReasseL He Is IS.;. They met ! months age at a movie studio, - where' they were working- ta- different pictures. Associated Press Teiemaf. -t GOP Urges Total Draft PORTLAND, - Sept. Sf-Tb Oregon republieaa executive com- mittee Saturday-urged immediate total mobilization -of 'man -power and property. . The committee said the proposal would be -submitted to the state central committee and, if ratified, proposed as the national program Of-the GOF. , x::" 'CO' '. The program call for. universal conscription, -for x&ilitarizatioo ot Industrial workers and for na tionalization of 31 property that can be used In 4he "war -effort. Th resolution arged the 47am be started "now, without waiting: for the Section." Wood Ceiling Up, One Lot PORTLAND,., Sept. An increase in. the ceiling prica on one lot of dry alab Wood waaau thorized Saturday -by the Oregon OPA director Richard G. Mon- gonwy announced. The increase covers 2000 cords to be brought here from the Mlatj area by the Meisen fuel company, setting, the price of the 12- -and 16-inch length fuel at 111 a cord. The ceiling price was $8.-. Earlier Saturday the Portland Federation of Women's organiza tions protested to the OPA the recommendation -by Brfg.-Gen. Brice P. Disque that millwood ceilings be raised to $12.50. The women said low-income families would be hardest hit --' " Staggering of Shifts Needed PORTLAND, Ore, Sept. S-(ff) StafjeTt4 shifts ia the three Portland-area ' - Kaiser ' shipyards are "an -immediate .transportation ne cessity," City Connnissioner Will iam A. Bowes advised Edgar G. Kaiser, local manager, Saturday. Bowes said that proposed bus service to. one of the yards, could not. be Instituted until working hours were staggered, because of traffic congestion. - ' - lie said the stagger program had been mutually agreed oa at a con- Congo Give Axis Africa Jitters PAIN Iglii) Ikssvtntx C&V ' - JiO TURKEY Pracasu .r- : TUNISIA f a-("uVr vna a m w I Ceng, pins reports that the British build a big camp named fer President Associated Press Telema. to Marry Soon A 4. new la Hollywood motion pictures. from Chiease. apply for -a marriaxe be saarrlesl la bosi three- weeks. 25 aad her real name jm Sintone ference with Kaiser several weeks ago. Under It day -shift workers would' report t 1, 8 and t a. m and other shifts would, be- tag 4ered 'accordxagly,' He Wanted Pants; So Did Sailort ' PORTLAND, ORH, Sept -S-(P) -Private George M. Yolk walked Into police -headquarters Saturday night, in military trim exeept that he didnt have any pants. . Police thought he .should have pants. Private Volk .thought too, but he -explained he had en countered two sailors who thought differently. Dircenv Charsea Robert K. Duncan, 1446 Broad way, was 1 lodged in 4h ilarioo county- jail "Stturds y- night charged with, laceeny. Acoordins. to the county -sheriff's office Dun can was accused of -having taken aflverware from a local restaurant. Thumbs Ride Pvt. Ors A. Foster (above) wk Ihambed a ride with Queen M other Mary of England, said he did an talking at first and that the eaeea mother identified her . self when her ear reached the ' village of his destination. The 22-year-old ' soldier's home Is Bear Pontlae. laehr Associated Press Teleauat. BRAZZAVIUI Mediterranean UMMbf TRiiiLliynlpiiiiirliiH E3: SUDAN FRENCH I EQUATORIAL) AfRlCA -. BELGIAN LCOPOLOVILLE are praeileiac invades laodlngs at treat peesibnttlea were seen s In Roosevelt, apparently ta prepara Nation Faces New Sacrifice Solon Says President To Ask Congress For Actions - (Continued from page 1) he understood that Mr. Roose velt weald ask 'congress to re move the ' act's prohibition against the imposition of ceilings on farm prices '"below 10 cent of parity. per Responsible , sources who fur. nished an outline of the president's program indicated that he planned to set aside this : prohibition by executive order, but Brown said that if he was correctly informed, the . president would state in the message that if congrea failed to act by October l. Mr. Roosevelt would proceed under authority granted to him by the second war powers act ."I commend the vigorous pro gram that the president is expec ted to outline in hia message,' Brown told interviewers, "and. I believe that congress ought to co operate with him fully In bring ing, about these, new- economic controls. I think the president has aaspte aatherttXte control m tea, bat I doubtful -aboat the eaieat of hie authority to set aside- a pmlalaa ?f aaet of eoagreso prshlbttsar eeiliiizs on farm prodaets belew II per- cent partty. This croviaion nermita ricm of aerkultural nrodueta . in . I r - I A 10 oer cent above naritv. .eMiaId..Doufiaa;-GlaBB L. Martin and ts a level calculated togtve farm ers -a - purchasing power- equal to that of a past period, usually I 1909-19 1 Soldicl-s Buy War Stamps, Theatre Plan and in uniform and the Quarters in front f the Grand theatre SaU urday niahtaa they bought war stampe end tccaaionally w on i passes to the moving picture-show. The passes they handed to admir- ins 'Touagateas. .And when . they had collected approximately 18 worth of stamps. they cracked-wise with a fatal utic ant, Aw, :we probably won't come back , to collect on em anyhow": and so the; three young second ; lieutenants handed their cash war investments over to an infant whose mother had ; stood with : -the- crowd watching their sport. Sale of stamps at the table where opportunities toward single passes were offered with 25-cent stamp .purchases and toward season pass with each .bond, ' to taled -460 its first night of opera tion. Theatre Manager Al Adolph reported. The innovation, ia in line with the nationwide sponsorship of bond -sales this month, .by the theatre Industry. ' : , n Camp' Adair Geld ' Timberlirie Dosa PORTLAND, Sept. S--The Timberline Lodge Mascots Bruel and tidy, will move to Camp Adair "Monday. Manager Fred Van. Dyke said that an officer of the camp phoned yesterday and asked for the St, Bernards, which were to be with out a home on the closing of the lodge for the duration on Tuesday. 'He-said' six other requests were received for the dogs. Nazis, Name I Gity Verdun ' Axis Forced Rack in Egypt ; . Allies Hold Air Superiority . (Continued from page 1) Germaa attackers at around SOS.MO, repeated the reds were ontnnmbered bat said the Ger mans were suffering sach ap palllng casualties that alarshat Fedor Yea Bock was . forced te assemble his last : forces from ether sectors and fronts. Even the wounded were Impressed la te the attack; those- hurt toe badly to fight were shot by their of fleers, the. army news paper Red Star said. I. Moreover, Red Star suggested the German position was growing difficult with a wall of Russian fire in front and scorched, charred and devastated steppes behind. From the welter of conflicting claims, the apparent fact emerged that the battle for Stalinrrad Hitler's prime 1942 objective was perhaps the bloodiest in world history. The resoluteness j of the Russians defenders i recalled ' the defenses of. Moscow and Lenin grad last winter and raised the hope that the city and the Volga might yet be heldV : ' The Russians too were standing firm In the Caucasus, and gain' ing anew in their counter offen sive on the central front near Rzhev. - ; .- ! On the hot desert wastelands of Egypt, the British were exact ing heavy attrition in beating back for the third day Marshal Erwin Rommel's latest offensive for Alexandria and the Nile. : The main axis concentration la Egypt - was ' aaeving back westward along the Qattara de presslea at the extreme sooth end ef. the front. Ia the center the New SEeatanden atrack. eat to the aeathwest winning their objectives and capturing . pris oners. The direction ef the cen ter attack . suggested that Gem. Sir Harold Alexander might be trying to force a ring around the Germans la the soata. 1 . The whole forward desert sands were, described as uttered with burned out ; axis material, par ticulariy heavy tanks that were prey of the British 25 pounders. The RAF and US air forces press ed their air superiority with tell ing effects. Already, . Rommel's losses had mounted high but the battle thus far as only prelimi nary jockeying for position. The axis claimed several - hundred prisoners including a New Zealand general . Caroi Planfes Decision Left 3 To Army, Navy (Continued From Page 1) cause of materials and the- need for technicians, would - Interfere 'with the production of bombers and fighters. They: were saM to have, objected also that tho-very size, of the planes . might prevent their use of northern military supply routes because of the icing meaace encountered on immense wing spreads. The special committee which reported to Nelson was compos i Grover Loening, of the WPB I aircraft production, division, Don Joha Northrop. Senator McNary (R-Ore) said in a statement that he was not surprised-at jQm adverse : report because airplane 'manufacturers "Mo not want a dynamic construe tionist j to tenter their exclusive field." He- -said he hoped for nxtter report1 from tns army and- navy - and Nelson. I Morgenthau Asks IflT nn .rWTininrr- IN eW'lrlail' Offered WASHINGTON, Sept 5-f)-Ia the face of reported opposition o: several members of the senate fi nance committee, Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau 1 Saturday night renewed his plea for ap proval - of his - proposed spending tax, designed to. raise 43,?00,000, TOO a- year to -finance the war effort. V'i :: - The treasury chief branded 'a-slur upon the -committee ear lier reports that it was about to reject the proposal submitted on ly last Thursday, y ; He described the levy as con sisting of two parts, one of which would be a flat 10 per cent tax on spending above "a bare sub sistence income," and - w hie would be returned to the taxpay er after the war, and the other graduated tax on higher spending. A proposal " offered tehtativeiy by Roy Blough, head of the treas ury's tax research bureau, COO' templates Issuance by the govern, ment of a sort of rationing cer tilicate to each taxpayei- permii ting him. to spend a certain pro portion of his Income, but Biore Income that : could not be spent might be expected to jpravi tate to -government bonds.- Pari Jail Break Told VICHY, Sept. S-iVThe -escape ot 2 political prisoners in a Paris jail break July 7 was' disclosed Saturday when Paris newspapers reported the sentencing of six re captured to 15 months each. The participants were being - held ' on charges of e - By JORKEL. SIMPSON Wide World War Analyst for The Statesmaa Piecing together the : military ordinary outpouring of 'official V anniversary comment whicp marked the start of the fifth, year of the war, tWs much seems dear: t , , Warship Lost , In-Pacific ' Fire Sweeps Tender In Port, Kills North Bend Man (Continued From Page 1) torpedoes, 12,000 gallons of deisel oil and 1,000,000 gallons of fuel OIL , , . , . ' The enlisted men who' died in the flames Were George William Genthner. chief storekeepr, 26, son of Mrs. Thelma C Genthner, Waldover, Me, and Sebert Price Malear, 27, chief signal man. North Bend, Ore, whose widow, lives In Portland, Me. Two others severe- y injured were LL Commander Joseph" A. --Corwin," 87, : South Orange, and Chief Gunner William C Batchelor, 44, Norfolk, Va.V?;-:':-f---V'w- FDR Asserts Yankee Arm Stronger (Continued from page 1) of our brother allies, the people who live by the sweat cf their brows have risen mightily to the challenge of the struggle. They have given their sons to the mili tary services. They have stoked the furnaces and hurried, the fac tory wheels. They have made the planes and welded the tanks, riv eted, the ships and rolled the shells. Production of war mater. ials here is now the greatest in our , history, butf it is not yet enough. It will be greater still This is an appropriate occasion to express my appreciation to the working people of the united States for the energy and devo tion with which they have met the demands of the present cri sis. They know what it is to work until muscles ache. They know what it means to be weary when the whistle blows at the end of the shift They know, too, that democracy has made- labor's advances - po sible. They know just what stake they have in America just wha they are fighting for. There -are certain to be stormy days -ahead. Laborers, farmers, industrialists. all of us, -are pledged to the war effort. We are certain to be asked for sacrifices. These may be sac rificea. of wage increases, crop price increases, bodily comforta. All this-Is little enough for free men- to sacrifice where fieedum la imperiled. Vichy to Reform In West Africa BERN, Switzerlaad, Sept. 5-(IP) The -Vichy .government Saturday ordered an avdmmlstrativa; reor ganization' of Trench West Africa, a move which private 'French sources described -a, a maneuver to delay a- decision on more j cific issues involving Dakar. The reorganization, is likely to take- the fonn .vf a,, series o newly appointed official, pen ally selected by Chief of Gov ernment Pierre - Laval and, -ac cording to -Paris, reports, may be the starting point for vaster axtainistrattvi shift Franca and in our overseas pos sessions.'" ' . Benton Storage Contract Given WASHINGTON; Sept 3 -ff) The war tkpartment Saturday armounced awards of the follow Ing construction contracts by the chief of -engineers. No further de tails will be released forpublica tion, tha department added: ' Between S50.000 Jtnd 4100.000 Deluca and Sons, San rrands- co, r Calif, - gasoline " storage -and fueling system, Benton county. Ore-, Portland, Ore.. EO. ' The WorWs News Seen Through ' . the Christian Science MornTO? A Itdmutbmd Daf J Nriacr Xm'rtmar ad Iaetracnve and Its Ia2y Feaeafw, Together wkh the TeelJy Maganae Sectiea, llikm , , The Chrisdaa Science Pabluhiag Sociaty -One, Norway Street, Eotoo, Mianchaets Price S12.00 Yeartf, e 1100 a Month. v Saattdar Imam, inclixlina MtrpmiM Section, fZ-M a-Yaaa, Introductory Offer, 6 Satafdar IaMes ti Caeaa, ' Addcew, SAMPLfi COPY ON RTQUST Obtainable, at Christian Science Reading Room 143 South Iiih Street-Salem, Oregon - , Oil developments and the extra In both camps, axis and allied, tho next rweivjr moc - - pected to be decisive. That does not mean tnavtnasmwe 1 ena oy nexx oepiemoer . in authority has . saio max, , nm even Bitter, a " . ..; , I Yet the plain- meaning of. both I Hitler's September 1 f broadcast from 'his " field headquarters In Russia and the anniversary sym- posium by United Nations spokes- men Is that the 1942-43 war year will prove crucial. It will eer- tainly Indicate the ultimate out-1 come. .. ;, ' There are evtoas parallels diseernible now with the events ef August. 1917. when . World War1! entered7 Us' f earth year. Then as new It was to the aaar ahallfaig of vast: Amerieaa re soarees la manpower, industry and technical skills that allied statesmen looked to determine the evtcome,'' -J-:- r- And there is no denial, but rather a tacit admission from Hit ler, of the .theme on which all these allied summaries of the war outlook were pitched. It was to the effect that while Germany and her axis accomplices have reached or passed the peak of their power and exhausted the advantage they gained by prolonged plotting and preparation for the attack, the United Nations fellowship is only now beginning 1 to muster its strength. w y-vv Allied striking power is begin ning to catch up with the axis on both sides of the World. Within the next year it will have passed it and be set for offensive action on all chosen fronts. That is what the war anniversary outgivings here and abroad have said in ef fect, even In Words. : y ' How else . explain this assur ance of Hitler to the German peo ple-against ultimate defeat: ' "A majority of the millions of the far-east nave' made a pact with the axis that wfU y prevent our land; front falling before . the . barbarism of the belshevikl or the exploUattoa of Anglo-Saxon capitalism." That implies that Japan is to be the savior of Germany, By no stretch of imagination could that expression have come from Hit ler's lip a year ago. Japan Agents Plead Girilty NEW YORK, Sept 5 charged with aeting as unregistered agents -ox tne Japanese- govern ment and receiving more than 3123,000 m cash from the Japan ese consulate here, two men plead ed guilty Saturday, before fed ral commissioner and a third was held by federal agents. Joseph Hilton Smith, , former newspaper man and free lance writer, or Old Lyme, Comx, and Irvine Harvey Williams, a British subject, of Iforoton, Cotau entered guilty pleas at their arraignment before United. States comissinoer Idward H. Fay in Brooklyn. Both were held in $10,000 bail for grand Jury action. The third man, Walker Grey Matheson, a former news analyst in the office of the coordinator of inter-American affairs, was arrest' ed in Washington sjid was to be taken to Brooklyn for arraignment later.. - .... Arsenal Seized With Bond Leader CHICAGO, Sept 5-(ff)-"ederal agents led by J. Zdwsr Hoover i seized William Bernard Wemecke, nationally known German-Ameri-: can Bund leader. In a raid on a Lake county farm Saturday, and i confiscated what' they termed a' "veritable arsenal.1 Hoover, director of the federal bureau of investigation, announced the prisoner was charged with vio-1 la ting the selective ' service law, and stated that he engaged in military drills and associated wit rifle groups on his country, prop erty and possessed ra large Quan tity of firearms, -explosives and dynamite. j Scraps Begins Monday ; Organizalions Lead Drive for Metals, - ' Rubber arid FaU . 1 Although Oregon's state fair is not to be held this year, Labor day. Its traditional opening date; Is to be marked by the flashing of at least one "go-ahead? signal, Claude L Sersanous, chairman of the state salvage committee reminded Sat urday as he called attention to the state's cooperation in the na tional scrap harvest, opening , la Oregon Monday. ' 5' ' Marion county, already actively engaged in salvaging what once Its 'residents would have wasted but now '.are saving for war produc- partidpate c w ug, chairman, has Indicated. Scrappo, creature of llmagina- tion and castoff Iron, steel and vj,,.-, been utilized throueh newsreel - aeendes as inroiration for other communities in the drive to raise the state's quoU of 20 I pounds per person. On the Mar llon county courthouse lawn be k J to continue to stand as a renund- er of the nation's need, lor metals. rubber and kitchen, fats, commit- tee members declared. , Through service clubs, women's and church organizations, granges. boy and girl organizations, ' press and radio, residents of this area are. to be constantly reminded of the all-out effort to .turn inthe state quota of 47,700 tons of scrap Iron and steel, according to Gene Vandeneynde, city salvage chair man. ,-:.. . .; Meat Ration To 5e Near Usual Use CHICAGO, Sept. Ameri cans win have as much or more meat, per person, under proposed government rationing than they had through most of the depres sion, but not as much as during the last war. This was shown Saturday by aa analysis of, meat trade statistics. Government authorities hope ta permit 'average civilian consump tion of 2Vi pounds per person each week after' allowing for the largo requirements of the armed farces at home and abroad, as well as exports to the United Nations. Sol diers and' sailors now eat more than 'double that amount Assuming rationing would re sult la an annual etvlllaa per capita ' consumption ef around 150 pounds, txclnsivevof lard, Amerieaa Meat InstHate esti mates showed that will be heavier than tome of the years ( ef the last decade, particularly during the period of the 1934-SC drought ; For comparative pur poses, here Is the eonsomptiea record, with 1942 flgares a pre liminary estimate. 1B29, 131.5 pounds; 1930, 129; 19J1, 130.5; 1932, 131; 1933, 135.2; 1834, 134.7; 1933, 117; 1936, 129.7; 1937, x 128.4; 1938, 127 J; 1939, 132.8; 1940, 141.8; 1941, 148; 1942, The i much' smaller American i population ate- a lot more- meat per person,1 than mis during the last war and the years prior to it In 1917" per capita consumption was 138.8" pounds; in 1918, 143 and ln 191. 138.9. before the out break of the last war in 1914, con sumption seldom, got below 190 i pounds and In 1908 reached an all-time peak of .162 pounds. Mexicans to Train MEXICO CITY, Sept 5-(flV Men between the ages of 18 and 43 must report Sunday for mili tary training under threat of los ing their civil rights if they fail to appear. t:,; v;,r'...i:: BUS j DniVERS IV ANTED GOOD PAT. PLEASANT VALUABLE TSAINHIG GIVEN " Opporunity for experienced and Inexperienced men to get into work asential now and after the wasr. Good fu ture training Jits you to handle heavy motorized equipment !"": ' --.' Work stow' available m San Francisco Bay area. Get further details By Contacting ' PAOriC GREYHOUND r W. n. Egger - C21 S. W: Water Street Portland, Oregon ' , r-.. -y; or xwrtte .yrj Pedis Grarbotmo! Una A. V. AUea 1919 Market Street . Oakland, Calit - , giving brief personal des-1 crtp tion picture if available outlining j experience or qualillcittona. " uennns v.. Steady work in a growing industry with bright fu-. ture. Good wages plus -overtime. SEE OR WRTTK : PadSe Greyhottnd Lines XL I t Ahress - .401 Kansas Street . ; . Sart Francisco,- y Calif.;