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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1943)
Tt CnZGCIl STATEZMAXT. Sdara. Creeps, Friday Menus?, Cejlssicx 12. IC13 4 (jrainlrnces Move Upvard 'Market Nervousness . Subsides cs Domestic . Influences Take Over! By WILUtRD RQ3ERTSON CHICAGO; ISept "H1VTrde jxervousness ever he Italian peace newy almost vanished and domes tic influence took over today in the grain market, pushing some prices up more than "a cent. All the ground lost on yester day's momentary- break was re gained easily; .; with September oats in particular climbing back to near the seasonal high. Wheat and . rye showed almost equal strength. Wheat dosed ? to 1 cents higher September 1. 48. Dec ember $L4?4,i. oats were up to 1,-September 74y.-, and rye was A to 1 cent higher, Sept ember 1-02. Stimulating ' to immediate buy ing were Winnepeg wheat- gains of more than two cents at times, due to continued unfavorable har vesting conditions and - possible i damage to -the crop; and .further evidences of the tight feed sit uation in this country. Bringing; the- tight feed . situa tion fur mi aid again wer at least two influences. One was the limmpcmnt of the War Food Ad-1 ministration that hog prices would e supported at $150 per hun- tired pounds, or si less man the prevailing price, from Oct. 1944, to March 3l,l45. The agency said; in explaining the' move, that it did not appear that feed supplies would-be adequate to maintain hog production at this year's rec ord level. , Also, Nat C Murray, nationally recognized crop authority, said In dications were that the nation was about "500,000,000 bushels of corn short of furnishing as much grain , for the number of hogs as was the case during the -previous" sear son. .v Oregon Said Threatened By Milk Crisis PORTLAND,' S e p t. fl.-(tf-A I dairy crisis, which has already left several -army Camps mQkless, is threatened in Oregon, Will H. Henry, manager of the Dairy Co operative association, told cham ber of commerce agricultural com mittee members ftere today, Henry charged that 3PA regu- lations wHl-ferce dairymen to unapam 4-oren x. ivi slaughter herd. He said that mflk al chapaMn. Arrangements for the deliveries -at Camp Abbot were halted beosuse-the Dairy Cooper-1 ative'a Salem plant could not meet I the OPA order te aeU mnat.tnere at regular Salem jprices. The or- iginal order, accepted Dy camp Abbot army officials, called for I daiem pnew piua w vi i mulc across ine mountains. l K li Peterson, state department of agriculture director,- declared, There has been no move by fed eral agencies to- restore lost pro duction of milk nor to check the decline 4n production. There- is onlr ane incentive ' and .that is price" "' - - . C3acfcamas County Agent Jonn MmmtttAA tHa I triuiiT- lft tiirkevl growera with 4lrdawhlch-cam legally 4e -soldi either Jo the gov-1 ernment or to civilians , - - keys, which do not meet army-1 JSSfSXT :SL der. One firm has a quarter mfl- i. w,mf At Hand. 'he Said, and! farmers are feeding their The Agricultural Bulletin, pub-vtli- K h Ushed by- the state agricultural Vacant-lot fruit and vegetable i,- fsrmara could sell . 1 . surplus produce to housewives wTtolMala rates., will be proposed by the committee to Acting May- or William Bowes. Soldiers Jam Bend, Preparing For 7ar Games BEND. iSeot 9 This once quiet mfll ; town its hotels and . tvutrritatf J Hanses , lammed to the rafters. Is bulging with thousands of abtdiera moving In for the start of the central Oregon war games Soldiecs'on leave, unable to find fcedv have been sleeping in Drake park,' huddled under G. L .coats which fight a losing battle against almost-freezing night -tempera tures. One night men built fire In a residential "street and curled up around ILX:i: t .-V Restaurants -are only now re stocking from the Labor Day holi day.whea a burtwo, had to close their doors, good supplies com pletely exhausted. Queues of sol' diers waited outside cafes and groceries. USO director Harry O'Grady reported more than 20, 000 cups of coffee sold during the rush. ' ' . tiercel rii..3 Caorte el lilaT faaettoa entfta pf mil nipf tMctsaeba, raaiiaiti0 nun. W pmmn, af po and aaarrr, rttuif fc mthurn irj ti'niMfM. lfnmumi cm ty wi aaaraaa aad buruuie aom i-aMH (W la xhtvw (.ins vitaf wua ' tJea ww.l Am ra tor' for Doaali T" -waawMafuar by au-iuwa 4 i j i .'i rriif mef mmd wui ce ta li ty. - c4 iuoa fcu-H ut r "Strictly Private' TH Aswy m. troops PGA3MG,Ut- 1L- ; vSSEft OjfiP f.: i i HERE. IS MCE TD USJWS UNDUDV JEEPS TD SB tSSHC&iST TO AtE ' (4 nfH poauBuri Dorr amtagetwtk rWKTCF KfeUS EfcUNG TO AC W BtJ Rft-trxKrwauc. an-rfr, "R 1 r rra-pa X A CtJLA JL9M.CIIADL O tyI 1 ' "T Jrlail JtleVieW For Saturday CAMP ADAIR, Ore, Sept. 9 (Special) " Organization , of "Ore gon's Own" Trail Blazer division the 70th infantry, will be com pleted at' Camp Adair Saturday morning at 9:30, when all units will be massed for formal presen tation of colors and review, it was announced here today by Major General John E. Dahlquist, com manding general. The division, activated here June 15, has now reached its full strength, and all units are already in. ,fcining.: The event . Saturday, although not open for the ..public, will be- witnessed by a number of relatives and friends of officers and enlisted men, and state, city and other officials who have been invited. The troops, after presentation of colors, wfll be reviewed oy gen eral Dahlquist. An address will be made bv Leslie M. Scott,-state treasurer, who will represent Gov- I ernor Snell at the event Invocation will, be given by I . . M W 1 X-J- event are in we nn mittee headed fy Lt. CoL James T. Miller, A. C tof S, G.-L Before taking command of the Trail Blazer Division General Dholquist was A. C. of S. G.-L and puty chief of staff, European tSlBZtn operations, and was assis- - - iirfni commander of the .... TiHinn fro November. 1942 to March 1943. He has. been in the army since October, 1917. Assistant divisional commander is : Brig. Gen; -Robert N. Young, who last served as secretary of the General Staff in .Washington, jy-Ci "Brig. Gen. Peter P. Bodes, eimi" here recenuy zrom a on Riley.. Kansas, where ha com- the artillery of the Ninth armorea- tuvision. Bulletin IVIade Over; State Department Offers PaS8 for Name . .: I department, appeared here this I week in , enlarged form and m i . inew oress. I a two-color cover illustration j depicts the farmers' all-out effort In producing food and fibre for victory. With this Issue the Bul letin becomes a quarterly publi cation. ; The publishers want a new name lor the Bulletin and the person offering a suitable sugges tion will receive a season pass to the Oregon state fair next year. UIIY EMI -' Our machinery can handle 500,000 lbs. fresh prunes per 24 hour, day. Our present crew can handle 60,000 lbs.-per 10 hour day. 85 of our production capacity plus hundreds of tons of food wasting unless you help during these three weeks. -MEN AND WQ2SSN OF SALEM. The Nation's Food Administration has Issued you a CALLTOSRVICK.; The Nation's War Labor Board has fixed your hourly compen sation at 62e for women and 77 e for men. The Nation's Price Adaiaistration baa established prices to growers and cannera. The Nation's War Production Board has made additional tin availble to salvage the crop, . , . - ,! Telephone Mark Gehlar at 4011 and arrange your shift for the next three weeks. Makeita ten hour shift or a five hour shift Or team up with another patriot so each works only every other day. " - - Jtlorning Shift 7:30 to 12 :3Q . (Shrs.) '.V. 'Afternoon shift : 1:30 to 6:30 . (Shrs) , TO S1EN IN , SHOPS - STORES . OFFICES: AsUe from yearself there are e ether able bedlsd men available Arranre with someone so that he takes 5 hears wLUe yea take the ether hears; Or three ef yea make it IS hears straight 17a aaast have day" tint men sa match a? wUh wemea who can work only eartiate . coopehatino virn other salejj By Quinn Hall . Escape Costs Prisoner 17 More Years 1 " Merlyn Gene Render's ' few hours of freedom following cape from; the Oregon penitenti ary May 28 will cost him approxi mately 17 additional years of im prisonment, it was ; determined yesterday .when Circuit Judge E. M. Page "sentenced : Kensler i to four 20-year terms, running con currently and beginning immedi ately so that they also run con currently,: with his original three year sentence, for r forgery ,on which: he had7 served about one nicthr Kensler changed his plea from innocent , to . g u II t y Thursday morning. Doyle Clark : McCahn. who; escaped ' along with Kensler, J has pleaded innocent and v his trial Is set September 15. The ' Indictments in both eases include the act of taking a rifle and revolver from H. E. Corey, and the taking of money and au tomobues from Claude M. Kil gore, J. G, Zoellner and M. J J. Shower. No action has been taken in connection with the serious wounding of R.' C Shields of Me- hama, the grand jury having de layed consideration of this occur rence pending developments as I to Shields recovery, j. 'if U Deliberately Set i Fires Controlled j ROSEBTJRG, Sept 9.-(A?)-A chain of deliberately set fires. blazing over 200 acres In the big gest Douglas county forest fire since 1939, was being brought un der control today. Tire fighters dug trenches in critical areas to halt spreading of the blaze Fred L Southwick, su pervising , warden of the Douglas Protective association, reported that from ten to 12 firea had been set amid 20-year-old timber near Glendale one of the county's best lumber acreages. ; Spud Growers Urged Have Fields Inspected For Approved Seed Growers who want to qualify part of their potato production for the new "war approved seed' grade established by the war food administration should request field Inspection from the regular certifying agency. ' Standards for the new grade, which was set up to avert threatened shortage of good seed spuds for next year, are not las rigid as for regular certified seed. . OPA contemplates, setting price ceilings that will permit sale of war approved seed potatoes at 50 cents a hundred above prices for table stock. anil UOIiSIl cro West Salem 'Feces' tcc!is; Sales Mcreass . BullisIiTorecs Pleased 7ith Coineback.iii Face of Record Drive ...-,--..--..: By BESNAED S.OARA . , NEW; YORK, Sept. 9-C55)-Fur- ther buying of peace stocks today gave the market its fastest recov ery In more than a month, and. while yesterday weak.armament groups still were more or less un der wraps as the .result of -the talian surrender. Jha majority managed to regain their ; equilib rium.'' i;"-'feiiw-,v v S-J-tri i The ; day's comeback t was. . es pecially pleasing, to bultish forces because of the fact It was negoti ated. In the face of inaugration of the record Government bond drive in which virtually all Wall street- ers participated. The , upswing got under way after a mixed opening. In front were gold : mines, utilities, steels, motors, rubbers, air ". transports and specialties. Gains of fractions to more than a point were trimm ed in many cases. ... The Associated Press 60-stocIc average "ended with net Improve ment of J of a point at 49.9. of 653 individual Issues traded the same as Wednesday 557 were up, 137 down and 159 unchanged. Transfers totaled 1,092,100 share, largest since August 3, and com pared with 797,600 the day before tiniina Plant Croup Elects Qay Cochran cViTTTV Can! A A . Tt ?r. Uiin JL a. a V u a tlfic northrtrest alumina commit tee was organized at a three-state conference here today and its first action was to denounce by resolu tion thewar manpower commis sion'sJblocking of a projected plant to produce. alumina from clays of the region.. :v - Roe 'Shaub, president of the Ta- coma--chamber of commerce, was elected chairman of the new alum- lha ctnmittee s Clay. Cochran r the saiem. Ore,' chamber and Ed Marphy of the Idahe state ehaaaber were elected vice chairmen. Business, induitry, labor and acrriculture were represented at the session. The resolution charged that the manpower commission's action. after the war production ooara had app roved the $44)00,000 "demonstration plant, was "un warranted, illogical ' and highly prejudicial to the best war efforts of the nation." : tl . The- erouo's resoluuon asserted Oiat the Pacific northwest, with its cheap power and established aluminum Industry, Is the logical place for such a trial plant; that the war manpower commission's Hrfr to move the plant to Ten nessee or Georgia is unsound; that such a policy would be deleterious n Vi Tvwt-war development o the region. Penicillin Flown By Army Saves Girl - MACON, Ga Sept 9-P-Anne Shirley Carter, 15, for whom; a supply of penicillin was flown from New York Saturday In an army bomber, today was reported to be "out of danger" py autnor ttiea at the hospital where she lay near death for several days before arrival of. the. drug. Hosnital attaches, said penicillin stiU was being adnunistered to the child, however, and she would not laava the hospital for several days' She ' was - stricken with streptiococcT Infection about two weeks ago. Body Found Hanging From Tree in Portland PORTLAND. Sept 9-iffVPaa- sersby this morning found the body of an unidentified man hang in? from a tree in a vacant lot The man, about 65, was wearing two nalra i of trousers and two shirts. ';-..-- zzzZzl c! 1 - r Evening shift 6:30 to 10:30. v ;(4hr.; ; , No Sunday VoriL to homemakers - OFFICE . STORE and FACTORY T70RKERSt Se ussy fanner eaaaary werUag wemea are ta fa3 tse war work that li's far ran ta take her plaea la the feed rrefiaeUan Kacs.' Do It hears er S hears eC'arraaffe wUh a frle&i ta work S hoars every eiier Cay. . .. v' canneries Draft Board i Was Too Far ror This Boy SPOKANE, Sept 9 -V- As soon as he got around to it, 24- year-old Alex K." Allen went, up to his selective service , board to register for the draft, greatijr up setting the young woman at the registration desk. - Lady," he replied, when asked why he hadnt registered before, T waa 9.0CO miles away, and lt was too far. to walk or swim.' He might have pointed to his head or rolled up a sleeve or pant- eg to show her three more rea sonswounds "received ; In south Pacific arguments with the Jap-' anese ' . ' : - " " : Allen; a former marine with an honorable xpedical discharge, said in an interview with a. Chronicle reporter that he had i: a bit ' of trouble, too, with the ration board. There, also, he was asked where he had been while all the points were being handed out 'Where I wasjf rd had a mill- on ration stamps they would not have gotten me a decent meal or a long, cool drink of water," Allen stated. , The Spokane man was at the San Diego marine base Dec 7, 1941. A short time later he was In Pago Pago, then in Samoa and later at Guadalcanal, where he was wounded by shrapnel in the head and arm.. Flown to a base hospital, he was treated and, returned to action in a month, only to be hit by shrap nel in the right leg. S V ' Reluctant to talk about his ex periences, Allen said; there was "nothing glamorous in a front-line ox-hole." Then he added: L "One night I was n a hilltop when the Japs began tb'lob mortar shells righfclose With only bayonet 'and a canteen ! dug my self a fox-hole in that coral rock in just about nothing Cat." ' Airline 'Officer Visite Salem' Harold Crary, vice president In charge of traffic for United Air lines, visited briefly in Salem yes terday on a tour of the west Crary is formerly manager of the Seattle chamber of commerce, and then with Boeing Aircraft before he went with United, j W i "Despite the turning! over of substantial number of airplanes to the army, the airlines, this year will transport Jtt million passen gers, 43 million, pounds of express and 30.900,000 pounds, of air mall a tribute to the complete utiliza tion of the equipment of the .In dustry said Crary. , "Air. transportation u so viiai ... a aae that the government has given the ah-lines the highest . priority rating for supplies and parts, and the airlines today have the best maintenance record in their his tory. H "Just as automobiles came into their own after World War 1, the airplane inevitably will assume a radically more important role af ter World War 11." ' . War Board Urges File Now for Tractorsf County farmers, whose farming operations are such that a new crawler tractor will be required tia ; laii are , requesiea uj urn . f . - a. a a.s county USD A war board to ffla the required application with the war board before October. 15. Dis tribution of the state's fourth quarter quota of crawlers wQl be considered by the state war board soon after that date . vl L The 135 n. Cccrdd SOnEf ODSCLES ttreScffwIlh 'UlIIOL-CESIC 50c Y,"hn canstlpatba gets you owa,1 gat pi wupt action from tf.tir.Vs tent eTrerrcacent salute laxative. - SOc . ir 09c I 1 fraaajraaaavaaaaaii. Has I 1 Caafctaaajret -cp ,111:3 zuy Jensen Yard AI-HTY FhHUp Meeker of Eur- Iingham - Meeker - company and Ilarry Hopkins of Broadmead have bought the Jensen Brothers Lumber yard here Sverra Jensen, the proprietor, has joined the navy and now is in training, in Idaho. MrsC Jensen and baby daughter. Katherine, ; wfll remain - in ' the famuy home at Amity. , : . . Mrs. J George Hammond and dan g h t e r, Gloria, of . Seattle, wash, have .returned: home alter a stay of sevepl weeks at the home of Mrs. Hammond's mother, Mrs. Etta Day. Mrs. Day recently sold her farm east of town to Fel- ty Bontreger and has- bought the property of Dr. . Bruce Miller on North Trade street She plans to move to her new home this fall. . Recent . guests at the home of Mrs. ,Maud S trout and daughter, Mrs. Edna Strout, were Mrs. Rich ard Lucas ' and family, Mr. .and Mrs. George Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Ted Engstrom, all of Seat tle, Wash. Mrs. Lucas Is a sister- in-law of Mrs. Maud Strout Mr. and Mrs. Eldon M. Brown, their daughters, the Misses Phyl lis and Dorothy Brown, and son, Billie, all of Portland were guests Monday, at the ' home of Mrs. Brown's mother, Mrs. Martha EL Brown .-.'.'cr' '-V-'i V-- Miss Nellie Razee of Seattle re turned home Tuesday after alhree week's visit here at the home of her uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. George E. Clark. Weekend guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. . J. M.. Umphlette were their daughter; Mrs. Robert G. Clark, and their . niece, -Jklrs. Elizabeth .Abraham Of Portland. , . Miss Pearl Groves returned the last jof the week from her vaca tion spent at Las Vegas. Nev with her brother- Frank 4 W Groves, and family and wtih her brother- Lin-iaw. and sister, Mr. "and Mrs. PaulJPryor and famyy at Bakers- field, Calif. Miss Graves is a mem ber of the West Salem school fac ulty. .. Mrs. J. A. Breeding, Mrs. F. W. Thomas and their niece, Mrs. Bes sie -Sorensen, spent" Friday and Saturday In Nelscott at the C. E. Wright home Mrs. Wright Is niece of Mrs. Breeding and Mrs. Thomas, -v ;'-, ' The boys and girls guards,' an organization sponsored by w the Amity Christian church, and sev eral members of the church and Sunday school spent from Thurs day to Saturday night at the coast. Plane Fares To East Drop Xrf" '' A substantial reduction In plane fares between Salem and Chicago and all- points east thereof was announced - yesterday by United Air Lines, effective.November 1, simultaneous with UnltedTa notice of filing a new tariff with the civil aeronautic board to make Salem a xommon rate point with 17 other cities . on the west coast Under the-new reduced rates. passengers traveling between Sa- lam-C hicif o-New York and other eastern centers win not be charged for, the portion of the trip between Salem and Portland; thus, giving Salem benefits-ol a MrmiFin rate point which hereto fore have applied to seacoast ci ties. .... W. T. Mclntyre United sta tion : manager here, pointed out that tius new reduction will-follow United recent action in vol untarily cutting fares on the Pa cific coast as much as IS per cent between certain., points. Original "YELLOW FRONT1 ' Vrtiz and Candy Special BtU Afeati far reasUr Prescriptions Corns make cripples - of healthy people Cera Ilcncdy 2cs Back pains may mean trouble Try '5&zzlzx?n Avoid embarrassment ) ! - - 1 , to ' Vocd Sbldicvc; More-Needed' - POSTLAND, Sept 9 -SV-Dcss make swell-soldiers, Dr. James B. Harrison, Oregon-Washington reg- onal director of the . Dcs-for- Defaut" pregraia, said today, v; Ea told how. a trained dog crept Into a South Pacific jungle after Japanese sniper, leaped oh" him, and draped Mm out to Amerlcsn soldiers. Dos can spot the enemy from SCO yards, and detect appro aching, aircraft long before human JisienersV" he -said.', '--.jA ? ' narrlson; called for more four- year-old dogs from this area. Farm Collies,; German Shepherds and Dobermans are faming in out standing performances, ha said. : Court to Hear Negro Murder Case Appeal The appeal of Harvey Cunning ham, negro, who is under death sentence for the slaying of Rich ard W.' Kerr In Portland on Aug ust 23,1342, will be heard by the state supreme court September 21, Arthur S. Bensen, court clerk, announced yesterday. Cunningham admitted the slay ing but pleaded self defense at the time of his trial in the Multnomah county! circuit court Five assign ments lot error were listed In the defendant's brief recently filed In the supreme court ... The 1 supreme, court yesterday heard the- case of Willis B. Wil liams and others against the Pres bytery' of Portland.-This action, appealed from Multnomah county. involves a contest of the will of the late Mlss.Ellen Elizabeth Bond of Portlandrwho bequeathed the bulk of her $100,000 estate , to a number of charities. She later was said to have' mutilated - the wilt The lower court held for the con testants. " :. 1 Legal Notice NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING Notice Is hereby given that, the undersigned Executrix has filed her Final Account and Report In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for. Marlon County, In Probate, and that Monday, the Xlth j tday of Octoberi 1843, at 10:00 o'clock: A-M. Vat, the court room of said court in the court house In Salem. Oregon, has been set as the time and place for hearing objections- to said Final Account and final settlement of said festate . ,'-V, k' , First publication, , 10th,: 1943; last publication,; Octo ber 8th. 1943. GRACE J. CONKLXN, EXECU- ' TRXX, Estate of Anna Kay lor Conklin, Deceased. PAGE AND PAGE . , Attorneys at Law 219 Pioneer Trust Bldg. Saiem, Oregon. if; S. 10-17-24; O. 1-8. j NOTICE OF FINAL ; rVi '-r: SETTLEMENT r Ruby Griffith, administratrix of the estate, of Walter W. Looney, also known as W. W. Looney, de ceased. has filed her final ac count aa such in the Circuit Court of Marion county, Oregon, and Oc tober 11. 1943, at. 10:00 a. .m. in said I Court has been fixed at the time! and place for hearing objec tions to the same' r RUBT GRrFFrrH 1 ' Administratrix . LYU5 J. PAGE, Attorney. Date of first publication: Sep tember 10, J943. S 10-17-24 O 1-1 gcmfU. f r KZtftoa CMmt, Filled 1899-1943 .' l Extra work bother you? ; ' 1 . Try SCHAEFER'S licrvo jci Dcro LHcl ECs Cz $1 Stop dangerou Irritation. I . Us HOOD'S Coughing hurts throat Try SCHAEFER'S z:s & $1 The part of the prescription drusslst in. time of war 1 to '' help your Doctor keep you weU by following' his Instructions accurately when filling your prescriptions. You owe lt t yourself and -him to be 'sura that only the finest and fresh est 'dries are used and ycu can be certain of that if, yea hring your prescriptions t mi- f. T7 if i Trial. SlaE2: For Octolj ALBANY, Sept 9 HD- tin. Catherine Wright 3-year-cU wife of a Camp Adair army Ser geant, wCl stand trial In Octcber on th charsa cf : stealing . t;-o--day-old Judith Gurney frcra a hospital crib August 2. - Circuit Judge L. G. Lew tiling set the trial today as the last coss on September's criminal docket Nine cases, the first opening Sep tember 18, will precede the Wright case.':'' r- A sanity' commission, to pass on Mrs. Wright's state of mind when the baby -was abducted, was im mediately requested In a motion filed by defense attorney Edward E. Sox. Mrs. Wright pleaded innocent to the child-stealing charge Tuesday. , The Gurney baby, safe and healthy, was found by police hi Mrs. Wright s home, just a few blocks from the hospital where it had , been taken a week .. earlier, District Attorney Harlow Wein- rick said. Legal Notice -EXECUTOK'S NOTICE TO CKEDITOtS NOTICE IS HEREBY . GIVEN that the undersigned have been appointed by the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Marlon County, probate department as executors of the estste of Velleda W. Ohmart, deceased,- and have qualified as such executors. All persons having claims against said estate, are hereby notified to pre sent the same, properly verified as required by law, to us at 205 Oregon Building, Salem, Oregon, within six months from the date of this notice. Dated at Salem, Oregon,' this 13th day of August 1943. ' , : ROY V. OHMART ' LOIS OHMART, , '.' ' Executors of .the estate of Velleda W. Ohmart, de . ceased. , . . .- Ronald C Glover, Attorney for Executors,' Salem, Oregon. A 13-20-27 S 3-10 NOTICE OF ALLEY VACATION NOTICE Is hereby given that the Common Council of the City of Salem, , Oregon, by resolution duly and regularly adopted , and filed on the 16th day of August 1943, ha declared its Intention to vacate, and has Initiated proceed ings to vacate that certain alley running in an Easterly and West erly direction through Block 33 of University Addition to the City of Salem, Oregon; and The 2pth day of September, 1943, at the hour of 8.-00 o'clock pt in the Council Chambers of the City HaR and In the said City of Salem, Oregon, have been fixed a the time and place for consid eration of such vacation and for hearing any. objections or remon strance , thereto. Objections, If any, i to such vacation,' must be filed in writing with the under signed prior to. the time herein fixed for hearing the same ALFRED MUNDT, City Recorder, City of Salem, Oregon. : . A 25-27-S 3 10-17 DoFA!LGE7LiiZTL3 ;. ;- -5 'i Eodt' r C!p7 TAJtTrxra. aa Iniprored powder to ba Bpclnkted oa spptt r iowar putea. hold fala taatti mora flrmlT to placa. D awt aUda. all or rock. No fumr, rooer. -paKjr -taata ac tltog. TA3 TXXTH la aHrlt aoa-ackl. Poca not sour. Cbaeks "plat odor (den tat Txat). Gat F ASTmU st any drag atora. - ' Store FLcno 51C7-C723 SLL li Uaaaejsa!a4- rSf Ittbuf awrfaco p4ap4aaJmlatHar r!ar aUa Inoa- oaa. Ct a I w af Iir4luf iaaay BOc V- S r ; - v- . L w a J -' . . . fc. i M ':roA';:V' 7 I f mm f r m t SJ i j ! I i l M 4 i V Ira " 1 m I'