PAGZ Zl Thm OHEGOlf STATECMAI& Cc!aa Oregon, Friday Morning. November Z. ISil Snow to Stay On Scenic nways Mother of Four Sons in Service Volunteers zs Nurse :. PORTLAND. Nor. 5-tr-The state highway : commission said .Ifcursday that It wilj not . keep pen this winter am- roads lor scenic and recreaUoael. purposes. The decision was prompted, the "commission said, because of de- pleted funds, ' gasoline rationing i which soon will curb unnecessary travel and military demands for the highway departments snow removal equipment. --u The commission authorized $1750 for 500,000 scenic Dostcarda ; which willrbe i auppUed gratis to men m the armed forces. The cards, which will bear Orecon views, wJOl have a printed invita tion: "After the war drive Oregon iunways."'i ! .'. ; D. H. Peoples of Bend, chairman of the Oregon section of the high way 30 eommtttee,. requested that , the highway, running west from Albany, thrpugh Corvallis to New port he def gnated as highway 20. He explained that No. 20 ia the proposed designation for a coast . to-coast highway. Commission Chairman Henry r . canel!, commiagtoner Huron Claugh, Engineer R. H. Baldock. Attorney J. M..Devers and Bridge Engineer G. S. Parson will at .tend. the meeting of the American .Association of State Highway of - Tiiciais at St Louis December 7-9. i - Earlier Thursday, the eommis- .sion virtually despaired of getting .completed two small bridges to .-the Vancouver ferry slip. Lindstrom Bros . contractors, - told the commission the lumber naa been xroeen twice, unfrozen 4 once, and tied up another time when AFL men refused to handle It because it was cut by a CIO crewi The Linda tr ems wanted to be released from the contract. . ' The board, however, refused the request and sought new means of releasing the lumber. Delay in the bridge job. is delaying instal lation of bus service between 33rd avenue here and the ferry slip. Lack of bus service is delaying operation of a-second ferry to Kaiser shipyards across the Co lumbia river. The commisfiian asked for bids on eight rock, production Jobs but got onlv three. . Counties and cities were ad vised to pool their snow removel equipment for this winter. Adair Mascot Traded Back CORVALLIS. Nov.,5 ;P The soldier-sponsors of Carmichael, black bear, are trading him to t-orvauis menagerie keeper for ' two mpnkeys. Carmichael got ,to be too much or -a burden. e wandered into camp and was domesticated by the soldiers who chained him to their bar racks. - CarBucheet didn't mind the captivity but -some camp hu mamtarians objected.' So did the architects. So did a few bar racks inmates -who couldn't get tised to a bear for a neighbor. The decision to eliminate Car- michael-r-named after a sergeant. ,not Jack Benny s polar bear- came, after he had -been enticed to pose for a picture with Florence Elerriam, camp'hostess. The boys used an apple. Carmichael went nuts about apples, broke into the barracks, stole Another apple and topped it on with tube of shav . mg cream, ( inen w tooK nap n-an empty bunk. .Now he's be ing traded for monkeys. mm -rrf I; r U Y Mrs. Helen E. Barry of Medferd, Mass salutes the photographs of her four sons, two of whom are In the Faettje. She herself is doing her bit beyond and above tha part she already has done by volunteering as nine In the John Adams hospital of the Chelsea Soldiers home la Boston. UN FhoteJI Suite Filed For Damages In Accidents Democrats Lead Washington Poll SEATTLE, Nov. 5 HP)-Washington democrats continued to lead republicans in total votes, an analysis bf Tuesday's light bal loting shewed Thursday, but the COP) bettered its. statewide per centage showing at the polls in addition to gaining three of the sue congressional ; posts, j 1 . Witft fewer than 100 small, scattered precincts unreported. ine total vote .reached 408.765. smallest general election turnout In years. Combined democratic i ..vote .ml the six congressional dis tricts was 218,633. or about 53 per cent, while republican" votes totaled X92,07Z, or 4T per cent. Congratulations Swamping Shell V Hundreds of telegrams and let- tVrc rnnffralulatin Cunxl. -m State Earl Snell oa his election as " governor at " Tuesday's general election, continued to arrive at the state department here Thursday. - Attaches of the office, estimated that more than 1500 of these tele grams amt letters had been re ceived up to late Thursday after noon. . " - SneQ returned to Salem late Wednesday after ? spending, elets tion night at The .Dalles and the following day la Portland. " ; ; Ceilinfj Ilise Asked : : POIITXAICD, Vov. oVStores demandi fciiiier prices than those of January 13 for remaining stocks cf firearms are fa the line cf-fire of the OPA, State Director r.ichard Montsomety warned Thursday. The ceiling was on the' t-5f3 cf pr- then. Three damage complaints grow ing out of two summer of 1942 automobile-truck accidents in the Salem area and seeking a total of $31,235 together with costs and disbursements of the plaintiffs were filed Thursday in 'Marion county circuit court. 'AltheaB. Isaacson, as admin Is tratrix of the estate of Daisy Cruise, and Irene Scott are plain tiffs in cases brought against Z. C. Brock, truck owner, and Lloyd Leslie, driver of the truck which June 26 struck an automobile driven by E. L. Swanson near the intersection of the penitenti ary cutoff road and the Turner road southeast of Salem. Mrs. Cruise died, a result of injuries received in the accident, In which Swanson, driver of the car in which she rode, was killed outright. -Mrs. Scott was injured. The administratrix of the Cruise estate asks $10,000; Mrs. Scott seeks $11,235. The third complaint is by Dor othy M. Roberts, widow of Ra mon Clarence Roberts and admin istratrix of nis estate. Brought against A. Colletti, owner of the truck, and Karl E. McClure, driv er of the truck which struck Rob erts car as it stood parked at 1:30 ajn. July 18 a half mile north of Salem city limits while Roberts was changing a tire, causing Roberts to be struck and killed, -the complaint asks $10, 000. It declares that Roberts car had been driven onto the shoulder of thehghvay and that the Col letti freight truck was driven in excess of 50 miles per hour. Snell to Have Jobless Week Secretary of, State Earl SnelL elected -governor of Oregon Tues day, will be without a job during the period January 4 to 11, next year. Snell's term as secretary of state terminates on January 4 and he will not be inaugurated as gover nor until a week later. The Jftate constitution provides that terms of all elective state of ficials; except that of the gover nor, expire on the first Monday of January, ! following the general election. Further provision is made that the governor shall be Inaug urated by the legislature on the first day of its session. The legislature meets the sec ond Monday of next January. . MI will find plenty to do during that week," Snell told newspaper men. , ' " I They'll Keep 'Em on Farm With Electricity Says RE A By HENRY B. JAMESON 7 ! ST. LOUIS, Nov. MVYou still laugh at the story about the city boy who asked! his grandfather how he. persuaded the cows on his farm to give milk in bottles. Well, maybe the kid wasn't so dumb after all The cows may never; learn to use the bottles, but the bottles may learn to do the milking. roe idea sounds screwy, sure. So did the steamboat, the loco motive and the airplane, in their time. But that's just a sample of how George Colian Dies at 64' Of Illness ; NEW YORK, Nov. 5 Broadway1 was'f :a T; xjuiet Jstreet Thursday '. as producers, play wrights, actors and ' others who frequent that noisy lane of enter tainment moumed the death of one of the greatest showmen of our times. .Just 'at daybreak, at 5 lsl, George M. Cohan died peacefully in his " Fifth avenue apartment after a serious illness that kept him more or less in capacitated for about a yean , He was 64 years old, and only a few weeks ago he said that he was recovered enough to take an other of his long habitual walks in Central park and also said that he soon was planning , another appearance i on Broadway both as actor and producer. v..-.v- President Boosevelt was one of the i first to; express his sympathy to Cohan's iwidow. : k :? ' " A beloved figure Is lost to our national life. In the : passing of your devoted" husband,' he tele graphed. kfle will be mourned by " millions whose lives were brightened 4 and whose burdens were ease4 by his genius as a funmaker and as a dispeller of gloomJ My 1 heartfelt sympathy to yott jand, all the family." ' - Ftmeral Services will be held in St Patrick's cathedral Satur day at 10 a-m, (EWT) with bur ial ; In the family mausoleum In Woodlawn cemetery. The son of a family act that was famous In vaudeville, Cohan, who was born at Providence, RI, on July 4, 1878, was - aa . actor since the age of 7. One of his first roles was In" Peck's Bad Boy." As a boy he wrote one-act plays for his family,' the Jour Co hans, and he also wrote songs for Lottie Oilson and Maggie Clilne, two outstanding variety stars . of those days. - ' " ' ' v Cohan, oetspokentoian who always said that his office was In his hat, wrote more, than 40 plays, about 100 songs and scores of vaudeville sketches. He was awarded the Congressional medal for his "outstanding contributions to the American spirit; which In cluded many patriotic songs In cluding the famous "Over There." He was a nun who was the personification of Broadway; and he never liked Hollywood al though he went- west a few times to make some mvoies. In addi tion to his play and song writing. he became a producer when he met Sam IL Harris, who had" been interested in some . amateur the atricals in Philadelphia. ( Heart Attack Fatal . PORTLAND, Nov. 5 CP) A heart attack killed John S. Cun ningham, 37r board of control In vestigator, Thursday while he was making a telephone: call. .The widow and a son survive. : : Toa mho su? er suett pta with tired, nervous Zeeiiags, aistreas of "liregu UrtUe" du to runcUonU month ly disturbance should try Z.jrU E. PtnUum'aTableta ( with addad Iron) . They hv aootblas esct on on of toommn't mott important organ. Also, thdr iron help build up rd blood. foUow Ubel amctional the ' government's expert farm planners are thinking about the "farms of the future." They say wider use of electric! ty after the war will bring many revolutionary changes to Ameri can farming, to make life on the farm much easier-and more at tractive to the younger genera tion. Among' other things, farmers may be plowing with electric tractors, using high frequency soil treatment In place of fer tilizers, pasteurizing their own milk and waking the chickens an hour earlier with bedsid "hurzers. Says M. M. Samuels, chief of the technical standards division of the rural electrification ad ministration: "This time we won't have so much trouble keeping the boys 'down on the farm after they've had a look at Reykpavik, Singa pore, Berlin, Tokyo or any other place they'll see during the war.' "They'll be coming back to a better farm life a life with vast ly improved comfort, convenience and economic opportunity. A 4k. 1 n4 W . XUbCL MAC UUI WU U1C UUjr, AC I M turned to our highly industrialized crap JTlie and highly centralized economy to find that the city was the only place that offered adequate op portunity. Contrast' that with the situation t o d a y t h e growing trend toward decentralization, to ward location of small, individually-owned industries: in rural areas where ample electric power is available. ! er of the future will live life of Riley. "Don't look surprised, he said. "Why not?" !! Every farm kitchen and every bathroom will have sterilization by means of a sterilizing lamp or similar device, he predicted. "Running water and lights in every shack. What about those electric trac tors? "Storage batteries are the an swer." The farmers can charge the batteries for almost nothing at night, with the low cost power that you are going to get after the war." This REA engineer, who has in vented a number of electrical gad gets himself, also visualizes the use of electricity in exterminating the corn borer and practically every other farm pest. i "Yon are going to have home dehydration, home wheat grind ing, high frequency for exterml atlon of ants, termites, mice, cockroaches, and boIlweevils,M he continued. He even forecasts a- "postage stamp" electrical rate, the same retail price per kwh everywhere. "Why not?" he again asked. "And "maybe you wont have meters at all, you will just get a bill for so much a month, de pending on the transformer size. Why not?" PORTLAND, Nov. 5-(vP-Th per capita collection of scrap met al in Oregon passed 150 pounds Thursday as 696 tons added by the industrial salvage section brought the .state's total to 81,992. "When some ef the inventions now held up by the war many are Just sleeping and others are. being constantly Improved are finally transplanted Into equip ment for farm eleetrifieatien, I see no reason why the American farm shealdnt be the world's best place to live" Samuels said a farm boy shouldn't the blamed for wanting to escape from "the endless drudg ery of the old-style farm,; where a man's time was never his own. and where the womenfolk! slaved in the kitchen with only 'primi tive 'equipment." He-made It sound like the farm- ITATIONAL FITNESS it DEMANDS ENERGY BREAD IS OKI OF THE BEST SOURCES OF FOOD ENEH.Q.Y - - Our enriched bread supplies two Important ' B VITAMINS Gndading VITAMIN B 1) and EOH.: Ask for this superior bread TODAY at 0UX EAT SCHOEPTS BREAD SGHO mm : :v. SALEM BAKING CO. 415 COUHT STEEET' - . , 73X3 W il l 9 SALE of Body Herm Your Opportunity, to Savm . For Now , For Your f If , . . 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