7 Caw! ETATwMAN, Sclera, Oregon. Sunday Morning. October 10. I-J3 IT Where They: Are What They Are Doing JEFFS3SON Blaster Stt Fred II. Thompson ef San Fran Cisco, CaKfL, arrived in Jefferson Thursday, morntaSitor a visit with lira, Thompson and her mother, Mrs. Gee. Set. Thompson has been In the service far 27 years. He Is having a 13 day furlough. TTOGZXBTJKlf LJL TV. P. He nath left Wednesday for San Fran cisco for a new assignment after spending four days with hi wife, the fonoer Lt Ituth Hanson, an army nurse, and 1ier parents, Mr. and Sirs, Tom Hanson here ' in Woodburn. LL Kodnath flew from the, Aleutian area to make his first vsit with his wife's family. SUNNTSIDE Pvt. Deyle Web ster, son cf Mr. and Mrs. Joe Web ster, stationed at La Mesa, CalifL, Is now aa ambulance driver. Pvt. Blchard Webster, son . el Rollie Webster,9 stationed at Gulf Port, Ifisa, has been promoted to private first . class, he writes his lathe DALLAS . Mr. nd Mrs. Cecil Riggs have received word that their son, Aviation Cadet RlcharS V. tUggSf has successfully com pleted?. ki primary fixing course at Tutare,. Calif, -and will con tinue with his basic training. Jim Desnbawstt fa spending a seven day furlough with relatives in Dallas. Dembowsfci 1s stationed In Canada- with the army engin - era, , ' Cada& and Mrs. Slehard Hlx are j spending- a- short time in Dallas visiting' at the Sdea Frink home Cadet Hix is attending Stanford university, Palo AJto. Calif. Pvt. and Mrs. Cdwin C. Baker have retnrned to Taft, Calif., af ter spending a 15 day furlough with her parents, Mr. and . Mrs. George K Kliever. Ensign Rex Pemberten, son ef Dr. and" Mrs. W. L. Pemberton, reported" to. Portland for navy phy sical examination Monday and continued to some California point where he will be assigned to ac tive duty. Pemberton, an engin eer, has been employed at the Willamette Camp pending his call pleted his basic flying training at the army air forces basic fly ing school at Gardner field. Calif, and has been sent to an advanced flying school to finish his pilot training. His parents are included: Austin T. Davis. John I Mr. and Mrs. R. C Jory, Liberty E. Finley, Orrin K. Johnson, Qr-j len J. Lewis, Richard B.-Phipps, Robert L. Poindexter, Robert F, Wiens, Salemf Merle 1 P. '- James, Aumsvule; Robert C Fox. Cres well; Carl A, Fracht, Lebanon, and I Carl Jackson, Sweet Home. road. ; He attended Salem MgS school and Oregon State college. Aviation Cadet Howard Damon has just completed a primary flight training course at Thunder- bird 'field XL Phoenix, Aria. . He Knssell Benjamin Davey. whose I is a graduate of 1 Salem high Salem address is 635 North 14th school and of North Pacific eol- street. ; has, been Promoted from iege of Optometry, and attended second lieutenant to first lieuten- tt-jJ-: s- ' . ant i in the engineer corps. Guy University of Oregon one year. He Francis Thompson, 610 North! was ,npioyea. ny me Columbian Commercial street, has been pro-1 Optical company in Portland De moted from second lieutenant to I fore entering the armed forces. cm lieutenant in tne ordnance ted! of Jefferson, route 1, and '; "A - George True Simpson of Dallas Pleted course as aviation ma- I have received similar promotions in the air corps. i chanic at Amarillo filed. Tex, army air forces technical train ing command. He is a son xf Mr. ! and Mrs. A.- Z. Wilcox, 2881 Brooks street, Salem. Ensign Frank E. Quids, Willa mette university '34, Is spending a brief leave in Salem with his wife and small daughter, Carole, and lUTm 1 TJ A i his sister. Isabel Chflds. In com- -wvjf aiuuiw mand of the armed guard crew on a merchant vessel, he has recent ly completed a voyage around the world. ;' PORTLAND, Get, t-iP)- Navy enrollments announced here today MONITOR Cecil Tories, whs Joined the navy recently, writes from the US naval training sta tion at FarraguV- Idaho, that he I well and likes it there very much. He is the fourth son of I Mrs. Iffle Vories to enter the ser- j vice. PvtvCharles Vories is some where In New Guinea, Sgt. Del- ford Vories in Hawaii and Albert Vories has been honorably .'dis charged after a year in the ser vice. . r LYONS Virgil Schentz, second class seaman, from Farragut, Ida ho, is spending a day leave at the home of his parents. Gordon Weitman, gunner's mate third class, visijed a short while Monday night and Tuesday morn ing at- the home of his parents, Mr. ana jvits. Joe weitman. - Pvt. Earl Bassett of Camp White visited relatives in Lyons. He spent a three day furlough at the home of his parents in Fox Valley. rams ' 1 (Con tinned from page 4) , 9:45 Sunny Sid Us, 18:00 Km . . " 10:18 Curtain Calls. ' 10 JO This and That lias Musie. 11:1 World Series. ls4S News. ! 1:00 Harrison Woods. " , sua no Room. - ----- i ' S 30 Texas Bangers. S:45 Music. 8:00 Phillip Keyne-Gordoa.' S:15 Star ot Today. 3 30 Music. " . 8:48 Bill Hays Reads tha Bible. 4 ;00 FultonLowis. 4U5-Johnson Family. s 4 30 Better Business Bureau. 4:33 Rainbow Rendezvous. 4. -43 News 8:00 Lean Back and Listen. -S:19 Superman., a 5 :30 RadioTour. 8:45 Norman Nesbitt 6 -00 Gabriel Heattes. 6:15 Grado Fields. 1 :00 Raymond Clapper. 7 J 5 Movie Parade , i ? 7:30 Lone Ranker 8 .-00 Pod Concert. v 8 JO Double or Nothlnf -90 News 9 as Salute to our Heroes 8:30 General Barowa 9:45 Fulton Lewis. 10:00 Wings Over the West Coast 1030-a.News. 10:43 Music. 11 4o Army Air Forces. ; 1130 Music Mixers. George B. Smith, Jr above son of Mr. and Mrs, George B. Smith ef Salem route , is a member f a class of student officers and aviation cadets soon te be end nated from the army air forces advanced, flying school at Stock ton field, Calif. He will be com missioned a second lieutenant. Before entering the final and advanced court at Stockton, Ca det Smith completed IS weeks ; f primary' and baste training at lai-Aere academy, Ontoria, Calif , and Merced field, Calif. MONTTOBr Mr. and Mrs. . C Coryne received a letter from their son, PauLrecently saying that he is well and had been pro moted to tho rank of cornoral. rim is on the island of Sicily. ; Tech. Sgt. Hal W. Lehman and Mrs. Ihman visited here recent ly at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Tehman, 1099 Mill, street; while he obtained a brief furlough during a military mis sion to the Pacific coast He is stationed at Greensborough, NC, head of the . office personnel ' at the air base there. Lehman was graduated from Salem schools and attended OCE before entering the army and being stationed at At lantic City. Be was sent to the Carollnas last spring. Mrs. Leh man, the former Miss. Irma Jansen of Salem, a nurse at the Deacon ess hospital, makes, her home with mm in the east. WEST SALEM Bernard White, Madrona street, who is in the ' armed service . stationed- a Klamath Falls, is on a two weeks furlough. Els wife is maintaining their home during his absence. ; -Included among the names ef 20 Oregon men wounded in action in the southwest Pacific area, list ed by ,the war department, are Capt. John George of Salem. whose wounding had previously been made known by the family! Sgt. Ralph. H. TJndahl, son of Beige LindahL 814 Lyle street. DaHasrT5 Floyd L. Dick. T4 Darren E. Hubler'and First Sgt. undon k. Jones, all of McMinn- vllle; and CpL . Bant N. Neely . of wuiamina. - Cph Josesh. Warren Davis - is horn on furlough, visiting his parents, Mr., and . Mrs. . J. Leslie Davis, Portland Road for a week. Be baa been stationed at San An gelo," Texas. McNeil Improving : SUNNYSIDE . Warren M e - NelL who has been suffering with rheumatism, Is reported improv ing, i v -W -f- Darrel L. Weeldridge, motor- ma chinists : mate tt - with the navy, made a brief visit with relatives in Salem enrevte te Pert Angeles,' Washington , te visit his - parents, Machinists Mate and Mrs. C. W. Weold ridge. The father is in the naval reserve. " Yeung Weeldridge was la the class ef '41 la Salem high school and lived on the North Biver read with his family. lie enlist ed in Janaary, 1141 and has seen active doty la the Soath Pacific in several major bat tles. , This is his v first leave home. Linn, Benton Snip. Cans ALBANY, Oct -(ff)-Tto cans from Linn and Benton counties expected to make a full carload -will be assembled here for ship ment to a detinning plant Octo ber 20.-V- ;.,'.;'--iv Camp Adair ,Lf C F. Lewl.rcirser.tsi cilicer. Fi-ares ccrllei by EJ Bit, in chars cf the civilian prc-rars. WO Ilizzs. post bond dZlccr, ana made available by Capt Gilbert A. Waite, chairman of the war bond committee, reveal the ext:r.t of participation. Additionally. personnel ' cf Camp Adair, by providing bcncli. entertainment features and rallies held in outside communities, did much toward putties over the rsmnsi'si for the ceccle cf Linn. Benton and Marion counties. Well Oyer Top In Bond Drive ' CAMP ADAIIt, Ore, Oct Conclusion of the third war loan drive found Camp Adair well ov er the top on all fronts, accord- j ing to figures of the war bond committee of the post Skyrocketed by numerous largecale purchases, one of them - for $30,000 by a Trallblazer pri- KatlOn -ElUSQU' vata and bulwarked by the steady purchases of military and civil- ifM Jnrf4 lin ian personnel who made subs tan-j VXi JDAM. AUVJ tial allotments from tneir saiar- ies, the drive went well beyond Rationing restrictions on eliri- expectations. i v bility for used passenger tires Post military personnel, officers have been modified by the OPA and enlisted men, cama through to permit passenger car owners m.h fnfnninff i wno nave been ineu:oie ior ures . $41411.03, and civilian ; personnel J to get Grade HI tires if they have laid another 123,814.30 on tne I ODiainea a speci .wr linau-t Civilian emnloves of thelany purpose except furlough' xnm i VrohHim an th Sneefal I travel. Service office have each purchas- J Previously no "A" book bolder ed totalling $3302 to their credit. I could estanuan eusiDiuiy ior ures . In the Trailblaxer. division the unless he used his car occupation total for the month of Septem-1 ally. . . ber in cash purchasea exceeded Special rations are granted by. u m- ei pfA n .1. wtr crice and . rationing boards a not I for mileage needed to meet such include the $50,00fr purchase. TKe I emergencies as medical treatment 247ta infantry toppea xne casn 1 nwww nua, vxiause w. , purchases while the ?75m led the residence, ate At-m wrtffi BTVitmnt- fVim-1 Snedal rations allowed mem pany E of the 375th won their I bers of the armed forces cn.leava . m . . 1 . a m - a. t m . pnase oy a lantni'T, sen ins over t or xuriouga wui not quaouy car 14200 in war bonds and stamps I owners for tires for two reasons, during tha month. ; first, tha driving for which this Sgt Charles. C. Peterson sent I ration I granted does not fall in In ImiuI, v.aoV- hnma 1 1 I to the "emerfpncT" cftteorr. and Long Beach, Fla. Fvts. Raymond I second, service men may get a W. DeVln and L. "Thomas Ander-1 ration for furlough travel for any son, added $300 each; according to I car available for pse, t Roger Darwin Lewis has com- Delinquetwy Problems Grow As Agencies Seek Care for Children o f Working Mothers By JANEEADS WASHINGTON, Oct. MVTheir mothers work ... the children found crying with the: cold, or hungry, locked in cars an day cn parking lots', tied to the furniture -in empty apart ments, aimlessly roaming the streets armies of "floating" j children ... The frail eight-year-old burned to death when- left alone in the rooming house where her f am-1 fly lived ... The grimy three-year-old whimpering on the curb ... The gang that robbed the deli catessen, that set fire to the ten cent store, that beat up the boy in uniform. These children have had no adult to look after them. The chil dren's bureau, the department of labor, the office of education and other groups concerned with the for the care of young children, the women s committee reports that large numbers of mothers "through economic necessity, an xiety, or eagerness to use their skills in behalf of the war, have taken employment and are con tinuing to do so. "No one knows exactly how many children throughout the country need care which families, relatives welfare of children are looking v. V cannot for an immediate remedy. iZzrZl " uonues agree They warn that an already ser- ,TL 7 , . SICrBDa " ious problem will be multiplied f. ?u - ?J weeK ' this year with the drafting of L e ,chdren bureau. estimates sis nno lath .nf h. 4 , i aooux one-uura or workans mothers to take jobs to supple- mother need care for their chil ment the allowances theyTl be dfen' and adds nt.no one kind getting from the government f f"- c?n lve Problem, Unless care is provided for the "rt" . .. y 01 "crnues is neea- children of working mothers, cmiaren 01 different ages. these agencies declare, the, full AJDoy 01 13 need 11 Program energies of the nation's woman- sulted to hu mterests," the bu- nower can't hm ufa'lixi r,A k I reau says. A child under two senteesim, juvenile delinquency J neds family care, a four-year-old and "floating" children will hin-l""7"3 "UIBeiv scnooi. der the war effort t amuy situations differ. A To "increase efficiency of em- mther with several children may ployed mothers, reduce absentee- remest a foster family home ism, to curb neglect1 of children which would give the youngest and allav the anxietv of mother child ; care and also serv aa a the agencies ask .a comprehensive J base ?rom which the older chil child care program 'providing tor 1 dren can come and go." f health, .recreation, education and ter family care may be the ceneral welfare in -a variety of Imort practical system In snarsW services to meet the'varvina needs Populated areas where the mother goes 10 wonc in the city, the bu- of families. The; agencies declare the warreau concludes. area child care act of 1943, sup-; , ported by the president and al ready passed by the senate, would ; fill the bill. : - - This measure, - introduced in congress by Senator Elbert Thom as of Utah,., would provide a fed era! appropriation of $20,000,000 a year for operation of state-di rected child care programs. ' awa. mm a xam oixicb ot eaucauon ana xne . children's bureau report that 42 states already have formulated unified state programs ' and. are ready to put local plans . into : action, :--sv V ,-;; i The bill would provide for sup- ' ervision of foster homes where mothers take care of other wom en's children, a counseling ser vice to wcrking mothers, and, be t ore-and-after-school c a r a n f school-age children. The program would cover chil dren under 16, living In war in- Oustry. areas, whose mothers are employed in any of the various activities essential- to the war, .The agencies say passage of the Thomas bill would not mean fed- grams. Thar funds would be ad- mfnistered by the children's bu reau and the office of education, put existing ptil3 and privata ggendes would. be utilized.' . Althonh tha , war ', manpower KEX BN UONDAT-111! Ka. 6 :00 New. 6:15 National farm and : Borne. S -4S Western Afiricuitura. T DO Music T5 Home Demonstration Agtnt 735 Fiesta. . T 30 News. SO Breakfast Club. S0 My True Story. ao Breakfast at SardTa, iv aw news. : 10 :1S Commentator. IS 30 Andy and Virginia. 10:45 Baby Institute, ' 11:00 Bankhae Talking. ' lias Mystery Chef. 1130 Ladles Be Seated. IS AO Soncs by Morton Dovimt. 11:1S News Headlines and Highlights ud mam suger -12 :4S News. 10 Blue Newsroom Review. S .-00 What's Doins. Ladiaa.- 2 30 Treasury Song Parade.- 1 :45 Harmony. 1.55 Labor News. 3 0 Hollywood News. S as Kneass with tha News. -30 Blue Frolics. 4m Voice of the Coast Guard. 430 Hop Harrigan. 4:45 The Sea Hounds. 5r00 Terry and tha Pirates. S as Dick Tracy. S 30 Jack Ar matrons. S:4S Archie Andrews. :00 Music. 6:19 Newk 630 SpoUlght Bands. 635 Sports. 1. -00 Music. T as War Correspondent. 7:30 Music. 735 Cohnny HarreQ. 7:45 John Morgan. 8:00 Roy Porter. 8:15 Lum and Abner. v" 830 Underground Passport. 8:45 Your Mayor Speaks. . 80 Nero . Wolfe. 30-News Headlines At Highlights .w uwwu HcmsiT f - "Ti 10. -15 Novatime. . 1030 Broadway Bandwagon. 10:49 Joseph James. Singer. 11. -00 Thia Moving World, lias Organ Concert. - i 11 JO War News Roundup. : ssssssssMass9 KC-40SVAY-439 Ks. 1S News. 18:19 The Homemakera Hour. 110 School of tha Air. " lias Songs. 1130 Music.. 0 News. Has Noon Farm Roar. 10 Ridin' th Range. 1 as Chronicle. 130 Music. . . S. -00 Homo Economics Specialists. 130 Music. ' 3-09 News. ' 1 x 8:15 Music. 4.-00 Freedom's Fight. ' . 4:15 Trade Winds. I f 430 Treasury Star Farads, t 4:45 Highlights. SAO On the Upbeat' 830 Story Time. - 60 It's Oregon's War. 6:15 New. 6:30 Evening Farm Hour. T30-4H Qub Program. 8:00 Music. ; 8.-00 Music, . 830fc-Newa. 8:45 Evening Meditations. 7? ' : " ; " I J Eur Goats r-Tlio- finest seleciion v have ever shown. ' ERMINE - SQUIRREL ' OPOSSUM SKUNK ' MINX SEAL f OCELOT MUSXRAT RANGING IN PRICE From $145 to $3300 Chester Uarrie and Suits New Imports All the new weaves, colors and patterns. Nice selec tion of new plaids. Only two asents In Oregon. Come in and make your selection now as we are limited In quantity. $69.95 t. $99.95 f Sacony Blouses ; .... . t : -, ; . f The very newest filing In Screen print Jersey Uouses for better wear. New, distinctive, in triguing. ' . - Moderately priced a$m 'Adele Simpson DRESSES Toast of the town. Adele Simpson designs, always dramatic In conception and presenta tion, feature fh new, streamlined tradition In black and all new Fall colors and provide a wonderful background for exciting accessories. " - - p j 1 . .... ..... wed . $39.95 u $69.95 i i - i A I Dr. XZenry E. Morris, " Ontemetrlsf ' If You're a Soldier Behind a Dcs!i! c Your country needs you to do the very best you can . . v don't let poor eyesight hold you back. There is nothing more vital to fine, eyestrain lng work than good, clear vision. If you need glasses ... dont wait and waste precious time . get them today. Jlakt an appointment with our Registered Optometrist ? Aor.5tP,? l a free eye examination. We are KienuuauiT meei your eye needs. ' " Low Weekly oriilcnthlv Terms MORRIS OPTICAL ill State Etreel 1 Fhene 652i - , Ealera - Uverton - Crrena 1 Palter De Liso Shoes The aristocrat of all shoes. We still have a lim ited number of pairs In the best styles. We are the only, agency for these famous shoes m Oregon . V - In fact, from Seattle to Oakland. Come in and see this exceptionally fine shoe. Moderately priced at Price's Beauty Salon Owned and Conducted by Miss Larsou This Is a service we have looked forward to for some time but have delayed its presentation until we could offer our customers the finest salon on the Pacific Coast . . . with beauty work we could recommend ta our select trade. This has now been attained with Miss Larson. Call 5859 for an appointment. ( ; - i. " 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 . . V e -- t-IoyE-a ct vi