IL CIGCII CTATTCMA2T. Ccltcu Cre-ca. rriiay I iWi:. 1C:3 Liquor Board i Jay Borrow -To StocI:Up Indication that the state liquor control commission has in mind the borrowing of a large amount of money with which to make ad vance payment on future liquor deliveries and thereby protect it self against a serious liquor short age, was contained in. an opinion by Attorney General' L .H. Van Winkle -here Thursday. The opinion was requested, by Secretary of State Robert S. Far tell, jr. :.:-77 ;:.v:KUi:V;. ' Van Winkle held that under the Oregon statutes the liquor control commission has authority to bor row money but not as .a general obligation against the state. Funds borrowed by the commission would be repaid out of liquor sales receipts. ' The Oregon constitution pro vides that the state shall not incur debt in excess of $50,000 unless approved by the voters. JThe opin ion mentioned a loan of $3,000,000 or $4,000,000." ; . The attorney general further held that Farrell has authority- to . audit and issue warrants in pay ment of claims arising from the - purchase by the liquor control commission of alcoholic liquors for 'future delivery. Child'sTrayer i i i - ----- " -L' t 4H Members Leave Tuesday For Classes Members of Marion county 4H clubs will leave Marion square at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday on special buses to the annual summer school to fee held on the Oregon State col lege campus June 1 to ll. ' ' Following the general assembly of the clubs each morning at the school, special county- meetings will be held. At one of the meet ings, slide pictures of Marion county events will be shown. -Half scholarships to the 1944 summer school will - be awarded to the boy and girl from Marion county who turns in the outstand ing notebook of classes and other events at the close of this years meet, Amos Bierly, 4H club agent for. Marion county, announced Thursday. Poppy Sale Starts Today Headquarters for the American Legion auxiliary's sale of Flan ders poppies, scheduled for today and Saturday, will be at the chamber of commerce rooms, Mrs. Verne :sQstrander, poppy chair man, announced. .-7; ' All proceeds from the sale of these-poppies will go into re habilition and welfare funds for disabled veterans, their families, and the widows and orphans of men who served in either of the World wars. , f ? Mayor I. M. Doughton has sign ed separate proclamations in sup port both of the Legion and auxi liary poppy sale and the Veterans of Foreign Wars "Buddy poppy" sale, scheduled for the same two days. i U.S. Trjurr &. The new Treasury poster Just released for June. The photo graph by Harriett Nadean, from which this poster is made, was the prize winner In an Artists for Victory contest held In New York City. The original photograph has been on display in the Mellon Art ftaJlerr. Washinrtan. D. C. . .i'.-: U.S.TrurjDetmrtm4ul Baccalaureate Service Sunday The baccalaureate service for the 1943 graduating class of Wil lamette university will be held in First Methodist church Sunday morning at 10:50, with Dr. Will iam Wallace Youngsonof Port land preaching the sermon on The Light of Experience. ; The university a cappella choir, under the direction of Dean Mel vin H. Geist, will sing "Blest Are They," j Tschaikowsky, a n d the university quartet composed 7 of Mary Schultz Duncan, first vio lin, Wendell Johnson, second Tio lin; Lewis Pankasld, viola, War . ren Downs, cello, will play " the offertory, "Allegro con brio, op. II, No. 1, Beethoven. Dr. Young son will be introduced by Dr. G. Herbert Smith, and Dr. J. C-Harrison, pastor, will be in charge of the service. Marion County Boys Awarded Scholarships OREGON STATE COLLEGE, Corvallis, May. 27 Three Marion county boys were among 69 Ore gon high school students who re ceived Oregon State board of higher education scholarships to Oregon State college for n ex year..' - - f . ,-7v, v .,": John Bbvid Caplan and James Alvin Nickel, both of Salem high school, were recommended by Fred D. -Wolf; principal. The third boyj ' Howard Albert - Mader, at tended Silverton high school and was- recommended by Floyd Light, principal. Caplan, who plans to major in science with, particular training in mathematics, was a member of the National Honor society, Snik poh! dramatic society, Que Dice, speech club, civics club,- Social Science club, Hi-Y, band, and the debate and forensics squads. Camera club, Latin club. Stage craft club, Science club. Que Dice speech club, debate, and school paper were the activities listed by Nickel. He intends to major in chemistry ' at Oregon State. At Silverton high school, Mader was a member of the FFA club, wrestling team, track squad, and senior prom committee member, Agriculture Is Mader s primary field of Interest. Mitchell Rites Held at Turner Funeral services were held at the Turner Assembly ' of God church on May 21 for Charles Calvin Mitchell, a resident of Turner. He was born at Ann Ar bor,' Mich, on December 27, 1858, in a family of five boys and one girl. The Mitchell family were pioneers of Michigan, the father being known throughout that part of the country for his Methodist family altar held each morning and night, ; Mitchell married Annie Hosack in Ann Arbor in 1893 and in 1911 they moved to the Pleasant Point district Mrs. Mitchell died in 1933, and was buried at the Twin Oak cemetery in Turner, where her husband also was buried last week. 7 Survivors include two sons, Fayette of Turner and Howard of Portland, and their families. Mitchell had been in failing health for a year but was ill only a week. The funeral services were conducted by Ethel Gutekunst, pastor of the Turner Assembly of God church. Roosas Move LABISH CENTER Mr. and Mrs. MartLi Roosa and daughter, Theresa, moved Wednesday from this community to the home of their son and his family, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Roosa, in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Baughman plan to move into the house soon. They have been working the land for the past several months. Midwest Flood Areas I IOWA ) fT OH, Sj-O AR eNashviHs --J KY MISS, f . ft la IJ ht.-.:.-L. 7 I mm r - u it laiiii 1 T T I m - VI Worth TEXAS STATUTE 4 WILIS .riny troops patrolled the Mississippi river from Alton, EL, to Cape Clrardean, (1) la ml J west flood sane. At : Beardstewn, EL. . (3), the situation was reported "mure" alenr the Illinois river, with Charles, IIo, district (3) described as critical. At Maskogee, Cl't, (4), water service was dlscentij" to 43.CC 9 Inhabitants. Levee breaks relieved pressure at Viiu. ..en. InL, (5)."est of V 9 Z3 levees between Fort Smith and Flas Eluff (6) in Arkansas .$,: cssa. f .;-.;7 77 77: r77:'-;. :n.''f'fv;vw--C"'':n'' Nevspapermen Form New- Press Qub Articles of Incorporation for the Press Club of Oregon were filed here Thursday in the offices of Lloyd Smith, 'state corporation commissioner, by Cecil Holloway, Portland, a member of the board of directors. Officers are Herbert Lundy, president, the Of egonion; Dudley McClure , vice-president, Oregon Journal; Dennis Landry, : north west manager United. Press, sec retary, and Floyd Lansdown, Ore gon manager Associated; Press, treasurer. Directors "of the club are Tom Humphrey, associate editor, Ore gon Journal; Merle Chessman, publisher Astorian-Budget; Clay ton V, Bernhard, news editor, the Oregonian; William Tugman, man aging " editor, " Eugene " Register Guard, Eugene; Jalmer Johnson, dty editor. The j Oregonian, and Holloway, The Oregonian staff. Wilber . . Henderson is attorney for the new organization. Valloy Births WEST SALEM Mrs. Glen Da venport returned Wednesday from the Deaconess hospital, with her new daughter, Glenora Lee. Buys More Cockerels FOX VALLEY Mrs. J. E. Jungwirt hhas another lot of baby cockereles. f She got 500 chicks a month ago, and an additional 1000 last week. . ' . Baillie YZams Of Crop Loss, Labor Shortag Calling the possible loss of crops in th present labor shortage more serious than the loss by any Ore gon ' flood or fire, W. H. Baillie, cooperating with the Oregon ex tension service, outlined the ways agencies of Oregon are meeting harvest labor problems in an ad dress to the Lions club Thursday at "the Marion hoteL 1 Baillie said that children work ing under : the platoon system, women in organized groups . and the part time workers were being relied upon to fill the ranks of 12, 000 migratory , workers who for merly harvested Oregon's crops. "Courses ef study In llarion county schools have made stu dents and parents crop conscious and sent them ; Into the, fields to harvest our SO million dollar crop,". Baillie concluded. - Nominations for Lions club of ficers were closed at the Thursday luncheon meeting. Nesr to Advise Youth Council Frank Neer, dean of boys at Sa lem high school, was selected by a committee, of the Salem Youth council as . coadvisor with Rev. Dudley Strain at a Wednesday meeting. , ; -a-.;; .-; ; The next meeting of the council is set for June 14 at the YMCA, Chris Kowitz, council president, said Thursday. ; , Tiiomao Lndd, Dies Thomas William Ladd, 68, man ager of the. Portland Home mor tuary for the last three years prior to which he was engaged for five years In the same business in Sa lem, died early Thursday at his h o m e, ,1335 SWHawthorne in Portland. The funeral will be Sat urday, at 2 pm. at the Christian church In McMinnville. The body will lie in state from 1 to 2 o'clock. Interment will be at. Amity. Friends are Invited to attend the services. .- .- v t'..r -' Mr. Ladd was born. in Los An geles county, Calif., July, 1878, and his early life was spent in that state. He married Ora Ladd In McIIinnviHe in I2C3. She sur vives as well as their daughter, Mary Jewell Ladd. ," .C- He engaged in the" profession of, mortician forv the last 23 years, the first 15 years of those as owner and manager of a McMinn ville mortuary prior to coming to Salem. ' , . 7 : ; :. .- i Pattersons Arrive . WEST SALEM Mr. and Mrs. L, S. Patterson have moved from Camp McDoel, Calif, to the Wal lace Road community. Patterson recently was discharged from tha army on account of age. He Is expecting to enter ' some sort of war work immediately. ; Joins Highway Crew I UNIONVALE Mrs. Floyd Mil ler is with the state highway crew at Redmond. ' lr lb . InJ 1 V 4 L I njJ 3 Reduced! IN OUR DOWNSTAIRS STORE OVER nil ri .-I Group 1 75 JV I X I, it 'h, : f x - - - $ a ! 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