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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 31, 1943)
TW OUTGO!? STATESMAN, Adam, Oregon, Wednesday 1'omlng, March SI 1S3 PAG2 1:3 Civil Service Plans Canvas For Workers : A civil service commission rep resentative, will be in Salem on Thursday, April 1, to answer ques tions and interview applicants for paid defense training, work, it was announced by Ethan Grant, assistant manager of the local US employment service office, Tues day. Three hundred students arc being recruited by the civil ser vice commission lor war. aeparx ment training classes to be held at Eugene, the announcement stated. The classes Include courses in aircraft mechanics, propellor me chanics. Instrument installation, sheet metal work, welding, ma chine, shop work and general aero repair work. Applicants may se lect any of these courses provid ed they can meet physical, mental and aptitude test requirements. Trainees will receive a salary at the rate of $1200 a year plus over time during the first three months, after which they are to receive pay at a rate of $1500 plus over time. ' Both men and women are to be accepted, with a minimum age requirement of 17 years and a maximum of 50 for 'women and 05 for men. "The training is for Jobs in war industries and will lead to civil service appointments for the war's duration and six months. Applicants will be interviewed between the hours of 8 a. m. and I p. m. at the US employment service office, 710 Ferry street, Saiem. Engineer to Discuss College Metamorphosis At Albany C of C Meet ALBANY Of interest to many Linn county residents, and especially ta those of Al bany, will be the visit here on Wednesday of H. G. Iverson of Portland, head engineer of the bureau of mines In the north west, who will speak at a noon Hincheon at the Hotel Albany that day. Iverson Is coming- as special truest of the Albany thamber of commerce. The talk, it is believed, will Real largely on the importance f the bureau and the possibil ities In the development of the former Albany college campus as a laboratory. Lebanon Teachers Reelected; Seven Decline Contracts LEBANON All the teachers of the Lebanon 'schools who i wished reelection were hired at the last meeting of the school board. Salaries have been be low the minimum now required by state law and the board has not yet announced what the in crease wOl be. Seven teachers have notified the authorities that they will not return. They are Mrs. Mary Wood of the grade school and Miss Elisabeth Aebischer. Miss Janet Hipps, Mrs. Isabelle Ka trina Mrs. Olaf Olstad and Tom O'Brien of the high school. Ricca and Cam pagna Surrender i Paul The Waiter" Ricca (left) and Louis "Little New York Cam pania surrender to the US marshal in Chicago to face a New York indictment charging- them and seven others with extorting more than $Led,aaa from! motion picture firms. They were held la SSO.000 ball eacbv Associated Press were vs." A. Courts to Hear Merger Brief s Arguments in the court fight involving the ! proposed consoli dation of the cities of North Bend and Marshfield will be heard April 13. the state supreme court an nounced Tuesday. The suit, brought by three citi zens of the Coos Bay area, is to compel the North Bend city coun cil to meet with the Marshfield council to review petitions asking the consolidation. The main issue is whether there is merit in the North Bend council (contention that the .1941 city consolidation law is unconstitutional.! . The following decisions handed down by the court: Guv French. aoDellantL Chriatner and John Dawson, defend' ants, and A. S. Page. Inti, appellant. Appeal from Clatsop county. Motion to dismiss ' appeal denied; in opinion by Justice " Kelly. i Mrrtoa and Bessie Emerick vs. F. T. and Mat tie Emerick. appellants. Appeal from 'Jackson corns ty. Suit on promissory note. Opinion by Chief Jus tice Bauey. Judge . k firmed. I In the matter of the Andreas J. Hattrem. T. A. Iivesley and John J. Rob erts Trs. Pioneer Tros Co, ad tmlaistrator, defendant. -and O. O. Larson, administrator of es tate of Weber A. Hattrem, de ceased, and others, 'appellants. Appeal from Marion count. Suit for $3591 claim against es tate.! Opinion by Justice Ross man. Jadge L. G. Lewelling. af firmed. In the matter of the estate of Andreas J. Hattrem, deceased: Agnes J. Hattrem vs. Pioneer Trust Co, administrator, de fendant, and O. G. Larson, ad ministrator of estate of Weber A. Hattrem. deceased.) and oth- Hanna, af- estate of deceased; mhuii-W')'.' '' - '' " HM j;imlM Wf1'lT-lW'yiTi-'Fw;,,'""'',1 : 'A"' ' J r: A-' P - L t , i . I' . - i in . him iii i i ,i i James Dunn and Joan 1 Woodbury in "The Living Ghost opening Thursday at the Uberty theatre, co-featured with "High Sierra" with Ida Lupino and Humphrey BogarL J r Pi How not to be a buUer. Jeannette MacDonald chastises Robert YoU05' who 1 Mt..i . ,( m'. r.lrA " naor nlavina at the Capitol theatre, for pretending to be an experienced batler wnen he Is In reality; an American newspaperman mixed P to spy Plot la Egypt ' i - ' Telemat. era, appetlanta. Appeal i from Marion county. Salt for $7t7 claim against estate. Opinion by Justice Rossman. Judge L. G. Lewelling, reversed. i : ! Petition for rehearing denied in Multnomah county suit of ; Peeler Tarola Motor Car Co. I vs. Pupils to Receive Dentists' Care ! Special attention promised to high school students through den tali clinics held in conjunction with the Victory Dental corps will provide pupils with .needed dental care before they enter military or civilian duties) in the war effort, practicing dentists of this area feel, according to Mar ion county public health author ities. . ; j The county health department is to conduct dental examinations every day next week at' Salem high school from 9 to 11 ai m. for juniors and seniors. The clinic is planned as a feature of the phy sical fitness dental program of the Victory corps, which, in turn. was outlined to aid in correla tion of activities of thei dental profession with the war effort. Lee Fredrickson ! 1 : Dies, Oregon City jLee William Fredrickson, four-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Fredrickson (Jean John son), former residents of j Salem, died Monday at the Oregon City hospital following a brief j illness Parents of the lad had moved i to Milwaukie recently to be near Mr. Fredrickson's defense plant em ployment. I I I Survivors include the grandpar ents, J. W. Fredrickson and Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Johnson, all j of Salem. Funeral services are to be at 2:30 Friday from Peake's Fune ral home at Milwaukie, with in ferment at Riverview cemetery, Portland. Around Oregon By The Associated Press I Lane county's last veteran of the Civil war, 95-year-old Chaun cey Meacham, who served in the l42d New York volunteers, died at Springfield where he had made his home for 33 years . . j . Presi dent Clyde Marsh of thej Oregon Fuel Merchants : association . said in Portland the state's fuel oil dealers will swap customers to re duce duplication of routes .j. Assistant Navy Secretary Ralph A, Bard, said between trains at Port land that Henry J. Kaiser's Van- uver shipyard, now building air xaft carriers for the navy, "has streamlined operation ; that is impressive.". . i.:f ! 4- f The Portland Oregonian's Wash- correspondent reported that Secretary of State Hull j held f no hope for early negotiations .with Japan which would lead to an ex change of Oregon men captured on Wake and other Pacific islands for Japanese : held ; prisoners by jthe United States . . ; . Only five farm ers in the Forest Grove area have responded to a chamber! of com merce request that labor neeas zor the cbming'harvest season be placed on file . Circuit J udge E. C. Latourette at Oregon City gave a 10-year prison sentence to Victor A. De Greer, 49, who plead ed guilty of raping a 10-year-old Oregon City girl . . .: . .' The principal of Portland's Lin coln high school, Harold York, told police some of his; students threw a brick through the window Of his home and wrote .notes warning him to suspend; the school's Hi-Y club . . V .""iPostoffice Inspector C W. Linebaugh said Richard M. Smith, 38, arrested at Oregon City, was wanted at Bay City,- Mich., on a charge of using he mails to defraud a woman of $ 17,000 - . , v Federal narcotics agents at Portland arrested five persons for investigation as the trial of Wallace WongJ Portland Chinese' arrested in a! raid last January, opened in federal court. Exams Friday In Salem for Armed Service , Qualified students have only two more days Including today in which to sign up to take examina tions to be given in Salem Friday for participation in the army, navy and marine corps educational and pre-officer training programs, Dr. G. Herbert Smith, president - of Willamette' university, w a r n e d Tuesday. "' The examinations will be given at Salem senior high school for high school students and at Wil lamette lor students beyond high school grade at 9 a. m. Friday. They will require approximately two hours' time. : Dr. Smith said the program of fered to students who pass the ex aminations at least one and pos sibly two years of college work and the opportunity in addition of qualifying for officer training. The examinations may be. taken by youths who have reached their 17th but not their 20th birthday, for the navy, and their 17th but not their 22nd birthday, for the army. Eligible are high school sen iors due for graduation before July 1 and high school graduates not beyond the age limits for the two services, whether they; are now in school or not. Applicants express a choice as to army or navy training when they sign up for the tests. Friday's examinations will be the last in which applicants may qualify for training programs starting in July and November, Dr. Smith said. High school stu dents may register for the tests Pledges Labor Walter ..P. . fceuther, . UAW-CIO lee president, speaking for ' more than 5 war plant work ers who : spent three days sampling army life at Camp Atterbury, IwL, declared: "No American fighting, men will ever want for fighting equip ment as long as we have breath and brawn in oar bodies." He is 'shown charging in bayonet practice, one of the activities the union men took part in, daring the three-day visit Associat ed Press Telemat. with Principal Fred D. Wolf at the senior high and other eligible, at : Willamette, today and Thursday. Governor Vetoes 7ine Tax Bill, Signs Five Other Enactjnents Gov. Earl Snell Tuesday vetoed first filing .and payment date back 1913 legislative enactment in troduced by Rep. W. W. Chadwick of Salem that would have raised the senate tax on fortified wines from 15 to 50 cents a gallon and lowered I the levy on imported bottled light wines from 30 to 10 cents. The executive explained he un derstood; it was not the intent of the "sponsors to lower the light wine tax. Rep. Chadwick, who introduced the bill by request, said Tuesday, however; that he had favored both the changes In the wine taxes which the measure proposed but was especially interested in rais ing the levy on fortified wines. He was advised by the governor before the veto was announced, he said, that the Burk bill restrict ing sale of fortified wines to liquor stores would accomplish the primary) purpose of the tax in crease, to curtail the use of these beverages. . , The governor also vetoed a bill that would have classified rabbits, ducks, geese and chickens as live stock in Washington county only, on the grounds it was "uncon stitutional class legislation." Five bills were signed by the executive Tuesday: The optional community prop erty law, estimated to save Ore gon's more wealthy residents more than $9,000,000 a year in federal income taxes. The occupational disease com pensation bill. The quarterly-payment plan for state income taxpayers, setting the from April l to fAprU 15. An act requiring employers to itemize payroll deductions. A bill to reduce state gift taxes. Trail Board Of fere Prizes The OldOregtai Trail Centen nial commission which has its offices at 824 SW, Fifth avenue, Portland, has announced that war bonds of $50 eacl wOl be awarded to first place winnersf in two di visions' of the essay and art con tests sponsored by the commis sion this spring; Other .prizes in the competition, rhich ends June 1st, nnge from a $25 war bond for second ranking students in two contests,; tojS in! war stamps for -fifth place winners. Permissible subject'; for the essay-contest, iwhih is j open to all high school students in Oregon, are: Champoeg;! he IGreat Emi gration" of f 184 arid the Fre mont Expedition; of $843. Com positions must b less than 1200 words in length. j j The art contest, which Is open to seventh and eighth grade pu pils in addition to . jhigh school students, includes a mural design ing section with pioneer subjects, a section Soi creative illustrations, another .for ; modeling or carving, and a fourth division for poster makers. A . $50 i war bond is of fered the winner ' of; the mural section, while the other three win ners will receive $23 In bonds. . Dentist Offices Fixed After Fire Complete remodeling of the den tal and; ; optical offices of , Dr. Harry Semler in the Adolph build ing at jS t a t e and Commercial streets took place between March 3, when! a fire severely damaged the suite, and Monday, March 29, when the offices reopened for business. Electrical wiring was installed: which would pass stand ards laid down in the building codes, of j the state. White enamel was' used to coyer the woodwork, damaged equipment was , replaced , by new and furnishings were re placed or repaired. Dr. Semler Salem . office is operated by Dr. Joseph T. Bur ton, assisted by four dentists, an optician, three laboratory men and 13 young ladies. tTJTS AO FRUIT CCS I Mentor Denounces Nippon Philosophy . me (Japanese a a race are convinced! that it Is all right to do anything they think Is all right," Lester Proebstel, principal of the state training school for boys at Woodburn, told Salem Ki- wanians jTuesday. The speaker drew his conclusions from 30 years spent in the Orient. His - subject; Three Monkeys, was . chosen because It epitomizes the basis of today's war. 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