I2i CniGCII CTATITMAIZ, Cils Ort-ca. Cunlr Ilsrd 23, 12 J3 A- WiemieE - "Elko War im Salemm 3 Most of Um yo g wmb la this aJctare are skilled and enthaslastie rrretera. netared" are most of the tylay a KetnhoM Lewis, veaeUaa bHnd ntaanfacturers in peacetime, mew concentrating ' -' production ef army lockers. The proprietors are Uayi C KeinheUt, eRosie the Riveter9 Crew Makes : By RALPH C CURTIS "Banging away unceasingly and with, all the enthusiasm and obvious enjoyment of the task that one might observe among par ticipants in a picnic nail-driving contest lor members of the "weaker sex" who always prove to everyone's surprise that they really can "drive 'em straight, a crew of more than two dozen comely young women is busy turning out army lockers at the Reinhoidt & Lewis plant in south Salem where, prior to the out break of war and the movement for dispersal of war contracts, . Venetian bunds and widow were manufactured. A few odds .and. ends of the firm's pre-war stock in trade may still be observed about the plant, but the crew doesn't bother to do anything about them. The firm accepts some repair work and or ders from old. customers, but Terms out the wok; all person nel and equipment at Reinhoidt Jt Lewis sticks to the one task of producing, army lockers Before the war the force of employes numbered as a rule about 11; now there , are, about 50 employed, ' aU of them except a small night shift being pictured in the accompanying photograph. More than half are women and girls, 'who ' predominate parHcu ' laxly in the 4 a r.g e ; workroom where pre-fabrication is carried on and one side ef which provides space for 'the assembly-line. Yes, .' there W- aa assembly line ineladlag several stations at each of which a young wo maa who aJrht ' tstwer though net tee specifically to the sum Kie, the Riveter performs the major task of assembling a locker every sis minutes, ' on the average. This is made possible, of course, by pre-fabrication of the 15 parts which go Into, the locker; the same principle though on a small er scale which makes 4 five-day Liberty' sh-iP possible Jn the Kaiser yards. The young women on the assembly-line, and some of those at the. pre-fabrication stations, are, riveters; others oper ate saws and the. eight special drills, built specifically for these operations, which receive part of the credit for the Reinhoidt & Lewis plant's extremely high rec ord of production per man-hour; one of the best onthe coast, the government inspector on the Job disclosed.-; .,;: That six-minute average assem bly cut down to four minutes or less by some of the workers, is possible for the reason that In - pre-fabrication the ''hardware" is attached to the various pieces making up the locker. The trays are assembled in another part of the workroom ; and" the lockers move on down the assembly line to the paintfag department, where a perfect painting Job is done by the spray-gun: method,: and then on into the drying room, out for a second coat and into a heated drier. The final operation Is that Of stenciling on certain Insignia, and then the lockers are packed in cartons and ' are ready for ship- ment where? :,' :': - If we knew we couldn't tell yea, bat it may be that some of these lockers' made fat Salem are - omewhere ia the Soath . Pselfic- others ia Alaska, stffl ethers la Tunisia and. where ' they'll be before the war ends Is yet another Inviting specula-. "T KHjt-t THAT HITS BuTT- dbtlcao wont travel so Car bat will be ased la barracks ta the trahiing camps wUMn the United States. But they go, they felfill a faacttea toward- the soldiers' comfort and efficiency and toward winning the war, . And there's - nothing quite so evident as the Reinhoidt & Lewis crew's realization of their contri bution's significance. Getting back to these -main assembly stations, they are. arranged in pairs, two young "Rosie, the Riveters' fac ing ; eu c h other. And the -quite young and agile pair at one sta tion obviously were racing; each concentrating on the effort to turn out lockers faster than, the other. Those at the other stations weren't wasting any time. : t Rollin C. Lewis, one of the pro prietors the - other is Lloyd , C Reinhoidt explained that they have their own inspector in addi tion to the government inspector on the Job, and that out of the thousands of lockers turned ' out, the number rejected could 'soil be counted on one person's fingers, despite the high standards set up. A Maaical Salote te Love ... seen IfTtpejKosejjBejnojjsjeiiB - " " 3 " "j: ' - t - - : v - - - ' ' ' . ,' -' - ;. j. x ... . v ::. 1 v. ;:-. -r : -...-' .. . ::.:;:...:. -;.:::. . . ' ; -:-:-; r - - --i - '' - .- . v .Ayy. -.-:' '.- ' :- , . :. . , , f ' k - - ' - 'J r. lmmmmnmmti fH iftnt aaoaasaiai u n i.ji.iii 1 1 l m him s Paige. Harriet Billiard and Dick Foran, now showing at the Grand theatre, ee-fearored wtta "Nightmare" with Diana Barryamere and . Brian Deolevy. Undergoes Operation MISSION BOTTOM Mrs. Cora Marie ; May underwent a major operation' at the1 Deaconess hos pital Tuesday. little Coleene May has been spending some time here with her grandmother, Mrs. Wil liam McGilchrist while her mother is in.: ,v; ;' DOniEVY lo issao I Mmko4 BAV19 CITtt Now Jo m the extras left, and KeEXla C Lewis, second mu to the tizfcs la the mil row. These workers are lietslnr te wla the war and there's a spirit of teamwork and -firtrt" la the plant which testSles that they a realise tL Etaiesmtaa pbote. Army Loclters Tiemey Stars In Movie of ChinaGirF A beautiful girj, defying vio lence and terror, and a daring Yank, flying, and fighting for vic tory,: provide an exciting-roman tic adventure story against a flam ing background of war m "China Gni," which starts today at the Capitol theatre. : - Gene Herney and George Mont gomery, teamed for the first time. are co-starred with Lynn BarLlIS pounds of curves, crookedness and kisses caught in the battle-scar red east. Victor McLaglen, who tops the featured cast has the rug ged type of role that made his name synonymous with hot and heavy action. The burly veteran appears as a two-fisted soldier-of-fortune who peddles his loyalty to the highest bidder. : ; f Opening with a , thrilling escape from a Jap prison, by. Montgom ery, an. American newsreel cam eraman, and JicLaglen, the , film takes in territory as newsworthy as tomorrow's headlines. . Mont gomery lams it to Burma, with the Japs hot on his trail because he refused to photograph the Burma road for them. Here George meets front "HI Baddy," starring Watts in Hospital MONITOR R. F. Watts, who has been 111 for same time, was re moved recently from the home of his daughter, Mrs. Arthur Schnle der, to the Emmanuel hospital in Portland for treatment. Two mu l I I I Continuous Today . ' P. M. to 11:45 P. M. News and Sabjects. Selected Sert Robert I y cret I . i of :f I I'ij' ) JapanW I v: Lynn I V Bart ,i Gene Tiemey, a patriotic Chinese girl, and falls In love. The exciting climactic sequen ces are said to have some of the most realistic bombing scenes ever filmed; Co-featured with "China Girl," is "Journey for Margaret, starring Robert Young and Lar raine Day. Mrs, Ross Resigns Silverton Teaching Potty Given Party BRUSH CREEK Mrs. Edith Ross, who taught here for the past three years, has resigned and Mrs. Clifford' Nybakka : (Viola Larson) will take over her duties next au tumn. Mrs. Nybakke Is a daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. C Larson and has been making her home at Silverton during the past year while her husband has been, em ployed In the shipyards at Port land, . .. ,, . Mrs. Ross was honored at a fare well party Thursday night at the home of Mrs. Dan Hilknan and some of the local parents present ed her with a cameo pin as a gift. Valley Births EVENS VALLEY Mr,, and Mrs. Nels Langsev have received word of the birth of a grandson, a son born to Mr. and Mrs. Clay ton Langsev of Pensaeola, on May 4. The boy. has been named Mor ris Howard. ? BETHANY Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dicker are announcing , the birth of a daughter at Portland on May 7. Mrs. Dicker is the former Dor othy ZoDner'and her husband is in the set flue. ALBANY Major" Robert Hus- nton and Mrs. Huston are the par ents of a five pound son- bom at Port Monroe, Va May 14. Major Huston Is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Del Huston of Albany, and Mrs. Huston, the former . Marybelle Barrett, is a daughter of ex-county Judge and Mrs. J. J.' Barrett This Is the first child tax the Bar rett home. - - - - A LO VS AS CSAV& AS V 4 D:s i 1 I V : k- & y yy j w AVI '. .T.i.Mll', XXJ'IPANION rcATun 'm t0 0f . a i.',i!i:tlTl:HII ,a ELnncfe EIps. Colnriia's . Nev Laugli Hit Not since "It Happened One Kight1 - has amotion picture crossed the screen possessing as much cnarm, as much humor and as much entertainment value as George Stevens "The More the Merrier, which opened yesterday at the Esinore theatre. Columbia's" newest hit comedy is Just about the funniest,'lastest, fardest laugh film we've ever sen."-" .-W - . The screen play written by Ro bert RusseH and Frank Ross; Ri chard Flournoy and Lewis R. Fos ter, Is concerned with an extreme ly . timely subject living . condi tions in jam-packed w.a r -1 im e Washington and the ' script is as crowded with laughs as Washing ton is with the will to win! Jean Arthur. Joel .McCrea and Charles Coburn share the top hon ors among the cast and each' one of them Is perfectly cast. Miss Ar thur is seen as a beautiful Wash ington secretary who, impelled by patriotic motives; decides : to rent out-one - room of her tiny apart ment. Cobarn, In the role of a fab ulous, , lovable- business . tycoon, persuades Jean to let him take the room despite her avowed Inten tions to rent only to a woman. . It doesn't take Coburn long to realize that Miss Arthur is not in love . with her fiancee; Richard Gaines, and he soon rents half of his room to Joel McCrea, an engi neer in Washington on business with the war department. With the three of them sharing Jean's "parlor,' bedlam and bath, a series- Of OTrfHrtgJ m1 mAtngfY hectic Incidents follow, with Co burn trying to bring McCrea and Miss Arthur- together on 'a more intimate relationship than mere ly landlady and tenant. -. ! Granddaugter of J Clipfells Dies t - -" ' '... ' FOX VALLEY - . Mrs: George Clipfell and Elaine left early Sun day, morning for Baker., where the small daughter of Mr. and: Mrs. Don- Shepherd was seriously ill with pneumonia. The word came here Sunday night that the child had died Sunday at the Baker hos pital. Mrs. Shepherd win be re membered as Pauline Clipfell of Fox Valley; The Shepherd baby was a year old last November and the only grandchild of Mr- and Mrs. CupfelL . .-: y ! -. - ' Little Sandra Forrest, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley; Forrest, has been quite sick this week" with a cold and high fever. She is re ported improving however. Grant Oxford Injured While Inflating Tire LEBANON - Grant: Oxford, while Inflating a truck tire at the Reeves service station . where he was employed," received serious head injuries when the tire blew up. The rim was thrown against his head. Oxford, who is; 19 years of age, is in the Lebanon hospital First Corps Meet Set :' " SCIO Lt Velma Jones has announced ' that an 'organization meeting of the : Scio unit of the O r e g o n & Women's Ambulance corps will beheld at the gymna sium Wednesday night, May 28, at which time the regular drill of the local state guards' is also to be held. -;-i A number of Scio women have signed to enlist in the corps. , Shris Tcday THEIR IICACT5... , Tf IHIUJMG AS TII8 rZSTttrYFACZDI I Piss r Lynn Barl is imafraid of Noel Madison ta tLIs sene freta "Secret ' Agent of Japan" at the Hollywood theatre today wii The Zlajer and the MInorJ . --':V-v i a - Frre-Tear-ld Margaret OXrlca steri for llarsarei." wlih Robert : playtag the leads. The pa starts today at the Capitol theatre. Co featirred with this nMvlng drama, finds "China GUV with Gene Tleraey and Geerge Montgomery. -v. . ... : : As crowded with laughs as Waslungtoa Is with the wUJ te win, George Stevens' "The More the Merrier" also has its tender moments. The romantic scene above, with Joel the mere poignant scenes ta the nore theatre, Ce-featared with Tunes "We Are the Marines," our own devil' dors. - - Daadrj 0 lU 12 ! HAG Productions Prescin---tTlie Haster of Musical C tr i - - :.USl J )f ' ;: - .. :: I ii ' i tlalj lfc-i n. J Jit . ' r . Tickets ca CIa tX the Hudc IocIs Nest EJjircre TJicatra , has the title role la M-G-Ms . Tom, above, and Laraftae Day MeCrea and Jeaa Arther, Is one of comedy, bow playing at the Ehd- "More, the Merrier," Is March of fighting full-length feature about -y. ' I "' " ' -it's I :'.-''( ilARY JANE DODD " "Dark-Eyed Debutante ' . - , of Song" . . f ' : sad' ; :- JAGI. MILTON Novelty Song Stylist" n E No On the day that America wc-1 1 war the March of Time Lc-an to roll their cameras on a flj '.'.irT, full-length feature tlxn tlllel Are the Llarines." ; T Somewhere in America at that time, Major General Alexander A. Vandegrift .was traiiur,-j marines for action somewhere in the Pa cific The Leathernecks were learning a new kind of war, pre paring to fight on wave-lashed beaches and in tangled tropical woods. ' '" "" This training the March of Time recorded, step by step, striving al ways to capture not just the action, but the living equality cf the nta participating. As a result, the stir ring, authentic film now playing to afford audiences the feeling cf sharing the exciting life cf li t marines, from their first experi ences as recruits to their ultimata destiny actual combat. To-these detailed training scenes were- added breathtaking fighting sequences, rousing, shots- of the marines- In action in the South Pacific, islands, in China, in all parts of the globe. To record the career of the ma rines from Solomon's Island, Ches apeake Bay, to the Pacific Solo mons was a task requiring L1U and patience. But Producer-Director Louis da Rochemont, with, the full cooperation of the corps, suc ceeded in doing all that, and more. Supporting the up - to-the-minnta story of the Leatherneck Is a stir ring summary of the glorious 187-year-old history that preceded him wherever freedom manned the war bastions in the past "We-Are the Marines" means just that. It is the marine's own film biography, told, by him In his own frank; two-fisted way. The feature was produced in collab oration with the US marine corps and is being released by 20th Century-Fox. , ' Nephews Visit MONITOR Abel,. Jr., and Jim my Jacobaonr of Kalispell, Mont, will arrive this morning for a vis it with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Ole Jacobson. Contlnaoas Today from 1 Now Showing Jean Arthur !a 1948 NEW kind of a, movie. IT SHOVVS YOU What to da where . there are 8 girls to erery man. IIow to make lore with a thin wall be- - tween you and your sweetheart 1 t ; ' Companion Featore fl Etnery scene is REAL! Every "actor," a fight ing; Leatherneck I ' Produeed by TH2 IXACCII OP TCI Coming1 Thursday ( f MB 1 1 i u . (Wt T" C I i . . faniiwi v..f It.. i ( ek,r . :c . : W I nT f S 9t.rn.mtmm rs f okoa t i