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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1944)
- The CZZGOIi STATESMAN. 'Salsa, Crsejoa. .Sunday -MwaLag; Jlnnst 27. KH Eidu.3in FTews DBn'Oceffs nm PMii Bail .When bail bond for Dan . Hess, charged with larceny by embezzlement, was re duced from $15Q0 to $500 Satur day, bond was provided and Hess was released." Arrested " at Sweet Home he was- held v for alleged embezzlement' of $301 T from' his former employer,Salem Naviga tion company, some months ago. When bailwas Jixed, District At torney : Miller B. Hayden ex plained Saturday it was believed that; Hess, -then in J an. eastern state would have to be "extra dited..""'1 :- -, -' -."''''' - -j ' . -j Wedding, pictures t a k e nat the church. 520 JS tat& ph. 5722. ' I Land Girt to. State Formal presentation ox - aeea to io .acres ,'of ''land .'at ' thetop'-of thep Glenn Creek road hill - inyPolk county to. the state highway oom - mission for, park 1 purposes was made Saturday noon in Salem by A ; A Vk J . ocueva vuu, prvuiuicui rwuana war Veteran and attorney. Fouts celebrated his . birthday by . turn ing over the deed to the property, the commission having voted a month ago to accept the gift. Excellent unpainted furniture, desks, book shelves. R. D. Weod row Co., 325 Center. . School Bos Struck A school bus, driven by Harry I Loomis, Brooks, used this summer to transport , workers to harvest fields, was struck by a private car driven by Grace E. McNeal, 243 North 14th street, shortly after 7 0 clock Saturday morning at the intersection of Cottage and Hood streets. No one was injured; both vehicles were slightly damaged, city police said. The Robe,! $2.73. Under cover," $1.49. Good variety Christian fic tion. Bible Book House, Inc., 150 S. Liberty. Fires Minor City firemen were called to two minor fires Satur- . day, one a grass fire on Smith street, back of the Cherry Grow ers', cooperative plant, and the .other at 435 State street, upstairs In an office, where a dustmop was afire. . 2 experienced salesladies wanted. Ph. 7698. 1 Sim Broken Again The elec tric sign at Price's store, tampered . with a number of times recently, n . -S. . is again out oi commission oe . cause of the handiwork of some ' vandal or vandals, city police were notified Saturday. Listen to KSLM, 7 p.m. Sunday. Club to Meet Townsend club , No 2 will meet at the Leslie Meth odist church Monday night at 8 o'clock. ' -Glenn Wilson, Townsend national 1 representative of . Texas, ' will be' the speaker. Everyone is Invited to attend. . The Apron Shop, 679 N. High St. will be closed Aug. 28 to Sept 11. i Rags and uphol. cleaned. Ph. 6831 Loses Purse, Money Mrs. Peg gy Steyens of Tillamook appeared at police headquarters at 2:45 f a Jn. Saturday morning , and said her purse, well Xilled with money, had been stolen or lost. Mrs. Stev ens was unable to tell where she had been, or where she had last seen the purse. .The contents, she said, were $898 in cash, two trav elers' checks, one for $1000 and another for $2000, her driver's li cense and miscellaneous other ar ticles. . ...... For home loans see Salem Fed eral, 130 South Liberty.- ; JUstaaraat Workers Hurt Gary Hutchinson, 14, jroute six, Salem, bus boy ina Salem - restaurant, was giverr emergency care Saturj day. by city first aid men .after he had cut the palm of his right hand on a refrigerator, door handle. He was the second restaurant' em ploye to receive first aid in the 24-hour . period. Friday night, Dolly Wright, 2384 Adams street, was the patient, having cut the calf of her left leg on a broken dish. , Listen to KSLM, 7 pm. Sunday. Ferry Costs Shown Cost of op eration of the Marion-Polk county ferry at Independence for the fis cal year 1943-44 was $6013.18, the report from Polk county filed Sat urday-with Marion county court showsMarion bears half the ex pense of the operation, which Is under management of the Polk county court Scripture greeting cards. New Christmas cards already in. Bible Book House, 150 S. Liberty. ' . On Vacation City Fireman and Mrs. Robert Mills, who drove to .Reno two weeks ago on vaca tion, traveling at; night to avoid the heat, have returned to Ore gon and with Walter Mills and Mike Steinbock are reported fish ing on the Columbia. They, will return to Salem early this week. Listen to TCKTJML 7 n.m. Snndav Illness Fatal John E. ; Ander son, 65, of 126 South 24th street, for whom city first aid men were called when he became suddenly ill Saturday morning at his home, was dead upon their arrival, ap parently from a heart attack, first aiders report For Kem-Tone shop R. D. Wood row's 345 Center Street . ' YWCA Group Will Meet The Young Business and Professional Girls club of the YWCA will meet at the YWCA on Monday evening for the regular meeting and also a no-host dinner at 6:30 o'clock. Ayrostar all weather jacket . Tail ored of Skinner's , tackle twill $10.95. ; Alex Jones, 121 North HightSt Home Sold Bert Keller has sold his home at 675 F street in Independence to Mrs. M. .W. Mix and. has purchased a home at 335 North 24th street in Salem. Name Changed Change of the name of the Burying Ground as sociation of School District No. 2 of 'Marion county, Oregon,' to the Champoeg : Cemetery association is contained in supplementary 'ar ticles of incorporation filed with the Marion - county, clerk - Satur day. : . . - v v'-.' CynV Crontse Photographs and Frames. , 1st .NatT Bank Bldg. . Child Injured Sammy Koonce, 3 M 'years old, resident of Abrams avenue,', received a r slight punc ture - wound on the back : of 'his head 'when he fell on a building block Saturday night at his home, city first aid men said. - i Improved .' Elbertas,. the perfect canning, peach. ;. Win . ,be ready about .Sep$.l: L;L Fruit i Ranch, Keizer Bottom. ... . - Kniukle Injured-Don Vautrin, 26, Grand Ronde, who told city first aid men he had injured his hand in an altercation with, an other worker at the McLaughlin hopyard, was treated for a cut knuckle Saturday. The Fashionette's "Clearance Sales Specials:" Dresses" $4.95, $6.95, $10.00 and $12.75. Real Val ues! Hats from $1.00. All coats reduced. Donors Sought Blood donors for Tuesday should register Mon day with - Marion county Red Cross chapter offices, by calli lg 9277, Red Cross workers declared Saturday when registrations were 80 short Bartlett pears, 1 mi. N. on Wal lace rd. Wendts. Celery Knife Injures Don Mock, 11, of route two, box 126, Salem, was '.treated by city first aid men Saturday for a celery knife cut on his left thumb re ceived while working. Picking Slappys . and Crawfords now. Elbertas in 10 days. L. Townsend's orchard, Mission Bot tom. Teachers Supplies In County Superintendent Agnes C. Booth reports that teachers' supplies for schools over the county are now at her office and, may be picked up there by the respective teach ers. :' Reroof with Johns-Manville as pnait sningies. Kight over your old roof. Free estimates. Ma this Auto Theft Reported Theft of his automobile is reported to the police by Otto Marquardt, route 7. The car was stolen early Sat urday morning from the Califor nia Packing company grounds. Listen to KSLM, 7 pjn. Sunday. Tire 8tolen ' Virgil Cheshire, 682 North 15th street reported to police that a spare wheel and tire were stolen from his automobile Thursday night at his home. CIRCUIT COURT : ' f ' ; John A. Schram .vsJ Mabel . L Schram: 'amended . complaint . for diyprce.- charges cruel and. inhu man treatment: accompanying af? fidavit declares plaintiff is able, to I more than four Tears of imnrison- pay$30 1 -a montn lor , support j Jment-from two Parisians, one "an mtnnr child. " I . - . rhtJ B. Fisru vs. ZelDhia wumau niarnea to rene Fisrisrcomplaint for divorce Frenchman and the other a French alleges desertion; married Aug. 21, 1 physician In the ' underground 1931, at Fort Morgan, Cow. J movement which by last Thursday nrder directs defendant1 to show aainst e Gtrnians ln this dty. cause on Sept' ,29 why he should woman, born In New. York, not be punished for ' contempt of I whose hus"band runs a Paris fac court ," -. ' . ;. i V ; : I tory': ;;: Mary J,, Ashinhust ;by:- Ruth '?f V 'A iiU' King, guardi.n ad liTX.-T defendant in military 'service ex pressly consents to .trial without necessity 1 of his being represented by attorney. .4,. PROBATE COURT - j. , - Anna M. Larsen estate; final ac count of Roy B. Larseh,: adminis trator, shows receipts of $1884.75, with $1754.10 for, distribution fol lowing disbursements; hearing set for Sept 30. ."..'! . LPdlbfln; LKlea3i?dls Residents Tell r Story of Paris Under Bonds c ' PARIS, Aug. 26-(rT)7These are stories of Paris-rci Parisduring rrwo things have taken me by my heart. The first was whenthey put the flags back up Saturday on the Hotel De VOle (dty hall) and the prefecture (police . station). Then when ' they came yesterday to liberate us. "It has been four years of wait ing. ' I love France and I love America more. My sister has been sent to a concentration camp. We Henry Schultebein estate; order have been on such rations here for citation on sale of real, prop erty upon petition of Martha Neit- ling, administratrix. Property in volved, lots 1 and 2, block 2, Dit- ter's addition to Sublimity.. Ralph W. Skopil named . guardian : ad Litem for Robert - Stevely, minor heir. i , MARRIAGE APPUCATIONS Lyman Rife, 30, truck driver, and Marie Dickens, 25,' both of 310 Water street, Salem, j . Cedl James Gantenbein, 24, US navy, 1997 State street Salem, and Rose Marie Siereg, 21, Norfolk, Va. MUNICIPAL COURT I Eugene Richard Davie, Sweet Home; defective brakes; $5 bail. Harvey J. Reinke; assault and battery; $50 baiL Ray Orvil Blair, Dallas; reck less driving; $25 bail.1 Harry O. Webb, route five, Sa lem; failure to stop; $2.50 bail. that nobody could really live on thenl without . the black market The ration was one fourth pound of butter a month for one person and a fifth pound of meat Only the very rich have been eating decently here. It would take at 'least $600 a month to feed a very small family. The black mar ket people used to go' out of Paris in a hearse and bring butter and American Tank in Marceille ill. -? j A French-Manned American tank rolls' along a street in Marseille, - Riviera metropolis and second largest French city, hunting isolated ' German units trapped in the dty. (AP wirephote from signal eerps food in here in coffins. They wouldn't stop coffins. ' "The Germans took all the food. You wouldn't believe it but they had every farm checked off. They knew just how much every one would produce and they gave ev ery farmer a quota sa much but ter, so many eggs, so much wine.' "I don't know of anybody , who has actually starved to. death here but there are very many and nearly all of them children who have been suffering for a long time from undernourishment" The doctor, one of the really big men in the , French resistance movement: "Last Friday night .it really started. We captured the Hotel de Ville and the Prefecture. We had those by. Saturday morning, - but the Germans were counterattack ing us all the time until you came. We started this attack .with 20,000 partisans. We 'ended . it yesterday morning with . 100,000. . . TIT Roles Under Questioning SEATTLE, Aug. 28-P)-Walter E. Hess, who claimed successively nadian -Mounted police, a ferry Ore, Is being held for question- : Inrr al fhm lall Online ' William Feek disclosed tonight ' ' itiessj ciaa in a blue-gray unl- -form trimmed in red and wearing . a campaign haV waa arrested at ; a downtown jbotel yesterday, Cap" tain Peek eaiL". after "toe" hotel' clerk suspidoned him and not!-1' fled authorities. :'.-. Feek said Hess told the clerk lie was a mmmtlii whA Tiad 1nf his money and papers and would have to wire for more when he registered, s The clerk's suspidons, were aroused when the supposed mounted policeman spelled Can-', ada with two N's, Feek explained. When . p o 1 c e arrived it was learned from', other guests the. story of his occupation had been changed to that of a ferry, pilot- -v Under questioning at the police station, Hess said his address was LawrenceburgInd, and that he was a "machmfe inspector, who had been employed briefly as a: Swan Island guard. In his pos session, Feek said, were a bank book under another name, a lieu tenant's bars and a letter of com mendation, purportedly from thej secretary of navy. California Sizzles Under Heat "Wave - s - LOS ANGELES, Aug. 26-(P) i The temperature rose 96 degrees! here today, highest recording since 103 on i September 23, 1943, the weather; bureau said. ! Riverside sizzled under 112 and its neighbor, San Bernardino, re ported 111. Other torrid readings induded Tarzana, 109, and San Fernando, 106, both in the San Fernando valley, and North Hol lywood 102. ; The weather bureau, forecast maximums of 105 to!. 110 tomor row. ' i ., . ' , ' j- , , Leaves for Visit Albert E. Ras- mussen, superintendent of the Masonic Temple building left Fri day for a visit in San Francisco. Taylor ' - William Taylor, late resident of 1395 South Liberty street. Tuesday. August 22. at the age of 68 years. Survived by his wife. Mrs. Mary E. Taylor of Salem, three sons. Robert E. Taylor of Corval lis and Joseph and Howard Taylor of Chigwell of Alberta, Canada; two sls- ; ters, Mrs. Barbara Baker of SeatUe. Alberta, Canada- and Mrs. Frances Dodson of Ohio; a daughter-in-law, ' Mrs. Lavina Taylor of Benicia. Calif., and seven grandchildren. Services will be held Tuesday. Aug. 29. at 10:30 a. m. from Clough-Barrick - chapel. Rev. Joseph Knotts officiating. Interment in ' Belcrest Memorial park. Biaegar Mrs. Mamie A. Binegar, at the resi dence at 70 East Turner road, Thursday, August 24. Wife of Ota D. Binegar -of Salem: mother of Mrs. Paul ZielinsW of Salem. Ota D. Binegar, jr of the army air corps at Santa Ana. Calif., . Frank Blanchard. with the US army in Burma. India, and, Donald and John nie Blanchard. both of Lebanon; and sister of Mrs. Hattie Varonos of Tu lare City. Calif.; and Mrs. Dora Pick ens of Portland. Also survived by three rrandchildren. Services will . be held Monday, August 28. at 2.-00 p. m.. from Clough-Barrick chapel. Rev. W. Harold Lyman officiating. Interment in Belcrest Memorial park. . c HMaMai : " " A- Koontx John D. Koontz, at. his residence 1885 N. 19th St, Friday. Aug. 23. at the age of 70 years. Survived by his wife. Mrs. Ida Mav Koontz. of Sa lem: two sons. Harold V. Koontz of Salem, and John D. Koontz, Jr.. US coast guard; sister, .Mrs. Pinkerton Day of Seattle; - two grandchildren. Rndeer D. and Harold V. Koontz. K both of Salem. Services will! be. held Monday. August 28 at 10:30 a. m.. from f-louBh-Bamck chapel. Rev.f WiUard Hall officiating. Interment in Belcrest Memorial park. ( Frank S. Giddings, late resident of 465 Columbia St., Wednesday, Aug. 23, at the age of ss years, burvtvea or wife. Mrs. Mav Giddines. of Salem three stepdaughters, Mrs. Bernice. Ha- CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our heart felt thanks for the kindness and sympathy, also the many beauti ful flowers, extended us on the recent loss of our dear husband and father. Mrs. Mabel E..Mc Cauley and family... ; zel of Salem, Mrs. Doris Le Baron of New York City, and Mrs. Esther Saunders of Catskill, NY.; two sis ters. Mrs. Jennie Woodworth, of Hast ings, Nebr and Mrs. Rudolph Col gart of Hartwell, Nebr.; two brothers, Charles Giddings of Western Springs, HI., and Emmett, Giddings of CaldweU, Idaho. Services will be held Monday, Aug. 28, at 3:30 p. m, from Clough Barrick chapel with interment in City View cemetery. . 4 . r Anderson John Edward Anderson, sr at his home, 198 S. 24th street, Saturday, Aug. 26, at the age of 67 years. Sur vived by wife, Mrs. Mary B. Anderson pf Salem; three sons, Howard of Mc Minnville, ' Marvin F. and John E., both of Salem; two daughters. Miss Irene Anderson of Auburn, Calif, and Mrs. Margaret Young of Monroe, Wash, sister, Mrs. Alice Rolefson, of Cato, Wis.; two grandchildren. Services will be held Tuesday, Aug. 29. at 24)0 p. m. from Clough-Barrick chapel. Dr. Hen ry Marcotte officiating. Interment In Belcrest Memorial park. Schmidt. Memorial services will be held Sun day, August 27 at 2:30 p. m. at the Howell-Edwards chapel (Walker-Howell Funeral home) with Rev. W. Har old Lyman officiating " for Staff . Sgt. Alexander M. Schmidt; 23, former res ident of 1010 Oak street, who was killed o Biak island. New Guinea, June 14. Surviving are the wife, Mrs. Norma .Schmidt of Salem; a daughter, Jo Ann Schmidt of Salem; five sisters. Mrs. James Uebelman and Mrs. Otto Hoppe, both of Salem. Mrs. Ed Ricks of : Jefferson, Mrs. George Slater of Seaside and Mrs. Jack Metcalfe of Turner: and two brothers, Christ Schmidt of Turner and William Schmidt of the US army. ' Watson William D. Watson of 9909 NE Pres eott, Portland, in that city August 24. Husband of . Minnie DeLong - Watson of Portland: father of Mrs. Madeleine Dunlap of Phoenix, Ariz, and Mrs. Charity D. Stepp of Portland; brother of Mrs. Marguerite Masaon of San Francisco. Also survived by a sister In Michigan and two sisters and four brothers in Scotland. Services will be held Monday. August 38. at S p. m. at the Howell - Edwards chapel (Wal- wr - Hnwcu Funeral home) wun m- i.rm.nt n tha Citv View cemetery. Arrangements by Ross Hollywood mortuary of NE 48th avenue and sail' dy. WU1 leave Portland at 11 a. m. Monday. - COtlPLETELY FOniHSEIED I We o!!ar lot sale the lovely Roy leene horn at 543 Le fHe street. It contains tdx large rooms, three of which axe bedrooms, on down, two up. Double plumbing, din ing room and Idtdxen harm numerous buIIWns, coxy krtcHccst nook, tn!ranc hc cheerful liring room large windows and fireplace. Automatic cdr-conditioned oil heat and electric not water beater. The) home is completely, tarnished, including electric range end refrigerator. Tho lorely yard contains numerous rare shrubs and trees. Garage. The price ts only $12,503.' Shown by erppointment only. SSvEOEl n3zUT7,0"E?m 212 North Kgh CL Phone 4316 01 'VI i 2& ' Hov ycu can have a beautiful kitchen now! A beautiful new coat of paint for your breakfast 1 room set. i - - Paint bright colors on your cabinets. Hp 4 Paint new color on your garbage receptacle. r1 Color spots for accents really smarten up kitchens. ItmiSWEXmCID $1.66 will do probably 4Ai tbest Tor color Ideas ' tctfd like to lend you tbiSberwin-WUllamt style; GUIDE Simwm a Williams. Paints BUY PAINT AT A PAINT STORE " ' ' gmmm "WARDS . . . a good store for men who want good clothes - 1 t v -1 ' CI2'S DQESSED VJGLL . ACID WISELY... IH A Bren ft - Brent is the choice of the man who KNOWS a good suit when he sees it. He knows it is precisely tailored of 100 , wool . . . he knows it has a reputation for long, hard wear vw end he knows Brent is tops in suit economy 28 Vt Wards .'r.'. Pcymtr.i Fht .... rWo Charz for Aktrd'am V" y.w am V OA TO MAKE VOUH? HOUSE A HOME i 1S5 North Liberty Phone 3194 375 Chemeketa St. Dial 9221