The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 20, 1944, Page 2, Image 2

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STATECMAi ColanC ' Oreg on. Sunday Mornliwj. August 23. 1344
Republicans
Lav Campaiff
n
Battle Lines
By ISABEL CB2LD3 l )
(Special to Th SUtomu)' 1
, POSTLAND, Aug.li-(Special)
-With the largest accredited at
tendance in its history, the Ore-
gon state central, committee of the
republican party hiitf "battle lines
here Saturday for' a war-year
campaign designed to- defeat not
only- the; new tdeal : but defeatism
within COP ranks; The creden
tials committee recognized dele
gates, from 34 of the state's . 36
counties.- . -. -
Winning the war is not an issue
In this yearjs "campaign. Everett M.
Dirksen, drawling, Scripture-quoting
congressman from Illinois, de
clared as he shared keynoter hon
ors .with Oregon's own Wayne
Morse. ' The nation is fervently
behind the war effort and no party
may claim to be more interested
than another, Dirksen declared at
the rally St turday night. .
Ask Free Enterprise ,
Both the former Pekin baker.
who was backed- by his congres
sional colleagues this year for the
presidency, and the ma whj re
cently resigned deanship of,. Uni
versity of Oregon's school of law
set at the top of the Jist of cam
paign goals the return to constitu
tional government and free enter
prise. - v " "-"i
Peace and the treaties attendant
thereon should be made with the
advice as well as the consent of
the senate failure to do this, 25
years ago is reflected in today's
conflict; congress during the next
four years should legislate out of
business every j, administrative
agency not vital to the nation and
should curb the powers of others;
the United States must collaborate
and can without loss of sovereign
ty in the sense in which the term
is used in international law. Upon
these planks the speakers agreed.
Raps One Party Idea . ' )
. No economic bloc must be read
out . of the republican ranks nor
should the GOP, become party to
any economic bloc; development
of a one party system would kill
at one blow free labor and free
dom of enterprise; . republicans
must unify and toss out the at
titude that it cannot win, because
it has the candidates and the plat
form for victory, Morse declared.
Attending from this area were
John Car kin and Mrs. R. L.
Wright, .Salem, Guy Newgent,
West Salem, and Freed Peterson,
Dallas, Committee members; Cliff
Lewis, Douglas Yeater, Adam Le
For, Elmer Church, Dorothy Cor
nelius, Leslie Scott, H. R. Jones,
Mrs. James W,.Mott, Mr, and Mrs,
Clarence Ellis, Floyd Cook, Nettie
Spaulding, Doris Woodburn, Helen
Ficke, Violet Dick, Cliff Lewis,
Charles j Treacy, Sen. and . Mrs,
Fred Lamport, Mrs. John Carkin,
It. W. Land and Denver Young. ! .
Officers Raid
I Home 'Stillery
George R. Parsons, 755 Norway,
j was arrested when city, state and
and -seized a 30-gallon i still, ap
proximately 30 gallons of. liquor
and 3S0 pounds of mash, together
with what was described by offi
cers as "all necessary equipment
including bottles and a cooler. i
The still was found in the base
ment. Parsons was lodged in the
county jail on a charge ot pos
session of an unregistered still.
Police Weigh Pennies
Instead of Counting
ROANOKE, Va, Aug. It (Jf
Roanoke police looked at all; the
pennies they had salvaged from a
weighing machine which a thief
unsuccessfully had tried to force,
and' decided, in the words of act
ing detective captain Frank Webb,
that "it was too .much work? to
, count all those brownies.'
So they weighed them and; the
, weight thereof was 47 pounds,
. Roanoke banks opined that j a
pound of pennies would come to
$1.50. That solved the case-10.-!
100. pennies or $100.30 which! the
thief didn't get - ,
j t
PilESmiPTIOKS
Nurses know 'they, can rely on
the purity and accuracy of pre
scriptions labeled with our
name - which always signifies
quaurjv . .:- -
lg$31944
'1.
DIIUG STO
Phoae 4137 or trtJi
133 Na, CommercSsl
Paris Yariks
CHAMPS ELYSEE; This fameus avenue, mile land urter long,
ascends to Arc de Triomphe. Park and avenne are among Paris
most fashionable promenades. '
LOUYEE MUSEUM; One of world's i
iteotural beaoty and treasures. It
. ear beginning 13th eentwry.
... - -3r3-f
i
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NOTRE DAME CATHEDRAL: Built daring 12tb eentary. cathed
ral's center spire was added daring restoration. Flne Gothic earr
ing rnaments 1U three doors.
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t . JT U' f 'ZXitfQ- '
? ' - ' -- i,a ' 4
LA BOURSE: Parts stock ex
change, with 88 Corinthian col
mmns SS feet high.
tt .i
225 N. Liberty St.
Jackson
Are Coming9
-i
: '-'r -
nost celebrated, because ef arch
is traced to Phillip Amngastns,
EIFFEL TOWER: Erected
for
. Paris exhibition of 13S3, it
984 feet big; L ...
Is
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1
noHy Jtissa ",!.-
r
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Bowles Says ;.-
Rationing May
lave aiow :
. DALLAS, TexJjAugj', IMV
Chester Bowles, director bf - the
office of price adiministration, in
dicated tonight that' the jpuallc
might bel ; fa&d with sbme ves
tiges of Rationing its long as two
or three years after the war,Y
: ''.V-v-. .f - . w , -' l.TTj'1-
At a press conference here
Bowies f as careful notj i to set a
date for the end of price control.
aplaued ' public ; response
to the enjforcement; of the ration
ing progjj-amj saying - itj .was be
yond expectations, ;and $aid pres
ent enforcement procedures Iwlll
not be intensified, WP
The pjlice j administration head
asserted ithat shipping "Space" end
manpower possibly Win be the'
outstanding' factors in d4tennining
the length of the rationing program-
- ; :r 1i-ifp:,i;
Bowles; indicated ; that!' some
drastic shift In the movement of
gasoline jjfrorA ' the:; east j coast to
the west pasfc probably !would oc
cur I at the end of the! war. but
expressedj doubt that gasorme ra
tioning would be affected imme-
diately.
Strikes
: j 'ill 1
Three! Youths
Robert; Williams,
IS, son of Mrs.
R. . Gunn of 1398
Chetneketa
street, incurred a broken leg and
was considerably bruised when hit
Dy a car jwnue ne was ncung Di
cycle opposite the! state house on
State street, Saturday night
Bill Amen. 12. arid Dukne Amen.
15, were Iriding double i n another
bicycle which also; was hit by the
automobile and damaged.
Roy Peterson, route; six, box
83, : Salem, was arrested at the
scene of lithe accident and! lodged
in the city jail on a charge of in
toxication. i ;--
The first aid car took.' the in
jured boy td the Deaconess hos-
pitat
Bomber Lands
On Sound
j
TACOMA,
vy bomber,
pany crew
Aut lHV-A he
with a Boeing com'
aboard, made an
emergency
landing fh ! Puget
sound near Redondo e!a.rly this
evening,! and all members - of the
crew were taken: safely ashore! in
boats.
W. J.
Betts,
unofficial "mayor"
community of He-
of .the beech
dondo, said two of the, fcrr mem
., r i i . w i .
bers; were transferred, tof stret
chers -after reaching ashoreone
with a broken leg and one who
had j taken considerable
water
into his lungs. 4!; .
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7 i -
in a
(5 i I 1 - lit -. w
- I
M 'J - :j ! ' '
i - V )-- - t- .-i.)r- .1...
: -,.1 : ! f4.vJ- vVv ;
Entire Pullman
For 25 Salem Area WAVES
An entire Pullman car has
area WAVES who will leave at, 3 pjn. today on a special jeast
bound mflitary train. , , ; , ; ' " " '
I Traveling with the platoon
WAVE officer attached-to the
officer piwrurernent. " -
lieutenant Hill will escort the
WAVE unit to the US naval train
ing center for women reserves in
New York ciiy where, immediately
upon completion ' ot " their trans
continental j ourney, its members
will report r begiri recruit train
mi and naval mdoctrination--the
initial phase . of their transition
front every-day civilian, status to
that of efficient disciplined and
capable women of the navy ready
to jtake over; navy shore Jobs once
assigned to jnen, whom they Soon
will replace to staff brand new
ships ready for action.
es Drive ' ' wi
of the large WAVE
contingent climaxes one of the
most intensiye recruiting programs
in behalf ot the WAVES ever con-
ted in the Portland district
ccessfui completion of this
centra ted campaign, however.
does not mean that there now will
befany letup in the continuing ef
fort to enlist more and more qual
ified young Women for emergency
service in; the navy WAVES, ac
cording to A. C Friesen, specialist
first class, in charge of the Salem
area navy recruit station, 220 post
office, building, ' which handled
WAVE enlistments in this area.
Weed Increases : -.,.-
invasion operations in Europe
and accelerated naval operations
in the South Pacific have greatly
increased the need for male per'
sonnet to serve afloat and aboard
and consequently, the need for
trained personnel at shore bases
within this! country, steadily is
growing, he said.
fShips are sliding down the
ways more rapidly than ever. The
important I thing is to get these
ships properly manned and on
their way to the battle zones at
once. The increasing volume of
WAVE enlistments throughout the
country is making it possible for
these new ships to set sail for
theatres of War in which they are
urgently needed, as speedily as
possible.' ? -
Sister listed
following is the complete ros
ter of the first Salem area WAVE
platoon: J '
Ehrerta M. Minton, Katherine
Iffarie Montandon. Marian Vir
ginia Boline, Frieda Erna Tredup,
Grace Emily. Wall, M erna June
Btsset Judith. Christine Jensen,
Alice Ella Humphreys, Ceraldinc
Way McGuIre Myrtle May Mc
Donald, Maxine Juanita- Scalf,
Marjory May Rutherford, Shirley
Dathel Johnson, " Mary Elizabeth
Lovett, oenevieve Catherine Whe-i&xi,-
Roberta Keef er, Dorothy X
Anderson, i Emma :. Lorraine Gra
ham and Irma Jane Ruber, all of
Salem; Emma Helen Hoffman,
Dallas; Neyelyn Grace Branch
flower, Yamhill; Evelyn MarceUe
tui
II i
1
a cm
TjI -t, ;
77vl J - SI i r . j
. it t .
Car Reserved
been reserved for the 25 Salem
will be Lt. (jg) Elizabeth A! Hm,
Portland branch office ot jnaval
v - - , . ' ; ; -
British Planes
fi wo-X J
1
Into Warsaw
LONDON, Aug." 19-W5tat
fire sraged in Warsaw when RAF
heavy bombers implementing
British-policy of helping anyone
who fights the Germans roared
over and dropped guns and am
munition to f patriots ipghting' the
occupation forces in the Polish ca
pital, it Was disclosed today. ! .
fine planes, 21 of which already
have been destroyed by nazi gun-'
ners within the city,' flewj from;
Mediterranean, bases j on a 1750
mile, roundtrlp flighif-a perilous
adventure which Britain .under
took although her Russian ally is
at Warsaw's wtskirtsJ j U
wmie tnere is no official com
ment British policy appears to be
the answer to The anomalous, sit
uation, for the' nearby Russians
have disavowed Gen. !Bor's forces
in Warsaw as creatures of the Po
lish government-in-exile in Lon
don, which the soviet union' re
fuses to recognize, y
JerryiMoore I
Writes Mothtr
Mrs. Katherine
South 22nd 1 street
Moore, (S90
has received
a postcard from her son. Jerry
son, .
Moore, US army air corps, who
is a prisoner of wa in Japan.
"uear Motner, received your
telegram a few weeks ag. Tell
everyone I am still kicking; check
on my insurance. Hope to see you
soon." In the form provided on
the card he had written that his
health was good, and! that he was
interned at the Military 'prison
camp No. 10 B, Philippines.
This was the first word Mrs.
Moore has had from her son since
December 1943, when she also
had a card. The telegram referred
to was one , Mrs. Moore sent to
him two months ago. i
A MAN SIZE COOKIE JAR. !
DENTON, Texas -(JP)f- The
"USO dub here claims to hive the
largest cookie jar of any USO
operation. According; to the club
curector, wnen : it's i uV-tbe, . Jar
holds B2 dozen. IK -H-1
- - . . . : ...
Berger, Stay ton; Vehna Lana Yeo
man, Independence; Viola .Gather'
Ine Schultz, ' Chemawa, and Mar
tha Ruth Higdon, Mill City
m
OA
irop supplies
; 1 f
wow uufi ammi
o . f
Rev. Harold Hoffman
Will Preach Sunday ;
DALLAS, Aug. 19 Religious
services will be held hv the Dallas
City . park, Sunday. Rev. Harold
Hoffman, pastor of the Dallas Free
Methodist church, will be the prin
cipal speaker and special music
will be provided. : , i
v This will be the first opportun
ity of many Dallas residents to
hear Mr. Hoffman speak, as he ar
rived only recently to take up the
work here. . i
Family Reunion Held
For MonmouUi Family
MONMOUTH, Aug. 19 -r Mrs.
Dora Goodman, local realtor, is in
Portland this week for a family
reunion to be held at the home of
her daughter, Mrs. Lucy Seidel at
Bull RunJ :. Two omer daughters.
Mrs: Etta! Wiebe, : Portland, and
Mrs. Helen Domaschofsky, Tilla
mook, and a grandson, Sgt Robert
Wiebe, home from Panama on f ur-
ough, will comprise the group.
More Portland Jail ; ,
Beds Recommended
Portland, Aug." i9-(Vp)-Dr.
Thomas L. Meador, city health of
ficer,' . recommended that more
beds in the emergency hospital be
used - for possibly-injured prison
ers pending examinations. $ This
might reduce the death toll in the
city Jan, he said.
Dn. Meador also asked the con
struction of a jail annex to pro-1
vide better quarters. .
OLD CAMPAIGNER
COLUMBIA, SC. -OP)- P&. A.
F. Funderburk, 80, completed bis
third successive annual encamp
ment with the S. Carolina State
Guard and feels none the worse
for the active campaigning. At
tached to a medical unit of the
Third Regiment he is a traveling
salesman in civilian life and a
former member of the state legis
lature. I . :' -" , I : :
If teeth are in bad condition or lacking, ther
IT-
must be repaired or replaced. ; 1
IAKE YOUR
OWN CREDIT
TER3IS, WITHIN
REASON.
BEGIN YOUR
DENTAL WORK
NOW,mND : v-::i
PAY LATER.
Use!
Accepted
Credit
MAKE (PAY
MENTS BY
WEEK OR
MONTH.
DENTAL
SERVICE ON
TERMS TO
SUIT, YOU
Make your first visit
without I an appoint
ment, r Dental plates,
bridgework, "'fiffings,
inlajs, crowns and ex
tractions. Plates' re
paired and relined. -
BACK THE 1
3IEN ON THE
BEACHHEADS!
Bur extra War Bonds
and Stamps. - Keep on
buying as they fight
I 123 LIBERTY ST. COHNEII STATE - - ' ; ?
5 ; ti; TELEPHONE; SALEM .tS2S? Mi
Othtr Offices la Ctrtne, Portland, Tacoraa, Spokane, Seattla
. Ana ta Ail LraCarr
OilMOUEFROlIT
The well-grbomed little woman
with sparkling brown eyes was
plainly 1 excited as she took her
seat beside me in the carpeted
coffee shop. , .
A cherry in. the half grapefruit
in front of me brought memories
of pre-warf days and for a mo
ment ' as my cup.-, was refilled
with the fragrant j amber bever
age from jt silver ! pot, I wished
that I might! live in such luxury
never 1 a l cusn to wash, bacon
without, the smell of grease, muf
fins every morning if I desired.
Beside, me the brown eyes lit
erally sparked and the soft high
pitched voice went on to the wom
an farther down the counter ...
"it's just a tiny apartment but It
has a little kitchen I can eat out
if I want to but F1I never HAVE
to again. Oh, I can hardly live
through the next two weeks. Yes,
I go in the first!; : ;
rA5
Pro-Yar.
SERVICE
for Vatches
dndJowoliy
atPRE-lMR
jcwitiis .erroMiriMTS
Dr. Painless
Parker Says:
ft
"Energy: and stamina are
priceless elements in home
front production "for war.
If man hours are lost be
cause bfi illness jand disabil
ity, there is a serious work
lag. To get the energy from
food necessary to carry on
your task, you must have
teeth to chew Irital foods
in your; diet When teeth
are lost; see that restora
tions are made with
plates j J --- --
NEW STYLE PLATES
ON TERMS'
TO SUIT YOU
If yon require dental plates,
select those made with the
refined material all den-
lists ' ! recommend for its
natural i color and natural
form.! Plates hare a time
tested balance and greater
wearing efficiency. Their
permanent' form means
they win f not ! shrink or
warp.; Avoid the discom
fort, the) embarrassment
caused by old-fashioned,
clumsy platesj The new,
lifelike plates may be pur
chased on weekly or month
ly payments by using ac
cepted credit.
TRANSLUCENT
TEETH ADD ,
TO REALISTIC
APPEiteANCE
. ' I hi. "fj Z::'K'"-V1..
" Science has. perf ecied artl
- f idal teeth that absorb and
reflect light si do natural
ones. They have a translu
cency that makes X them
hard to detect. iYpu can ob
tain them in the shape and
' shade
of
your present
' teeth,
-lustre
with the soft surface
of fine natural ones
It h
f PAY If QR PLATES
; AS YOU, WEAR
: ?
I
-4-
Ptciflct Coast, uues
PRICES
ISM
t j