The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 23, 1945, Page 2, Image 2

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    FAGS TWO
Longlti
inerarv
Mentioned for
New President
fcV WASHINGTON, May I ll-ifr-President
Trumait will follow in
the footstep of Franklin D. Roose
velt is a ' great' traveler if he goes
all the pla es being added to his
potential schedule. ','
It was strongly indicated today
that he might look In on the San
Francisco world organization con
ference before it winds jup.
Other business that may call the
president away for Washington:
I. A meeting with Prime Min
ister Churchill, and Marshal Stalin,
date and place to be determined.
2. "A conference withi General
Charles de Gaulle, head of the
French provisional government.!
J. A voyage to Manila for the
inauguration of) the independent
republic of the Philippines, when
; ever that is created. - " j ;
tn addition, 0e' president plans
a quick trip to North Carolina in
October to address a special ses
sion of the state senate.!
Goals Set for
- Salvage Drive
Of Tin, Paper
Three full railroad cars of tin
cans and three box cars of scrap
paper constitute the goat set by
the Boy Scout and the Marion
county salvage committee for the
drive this weekend - the final
pickup on a county-wide basis un
til October. . ... I I
. Prepared tin cans are the only
metal sought in this drive. Tin
cans with tops and bottoms cut
out, and flattened, should be pla
ced on cartons or sacks separate
from scrap paper and put on the
curb in front of house on days of
collection. j
: All forms of scrap paper are
wanted - - old newspapers, mag
azines, and books tied in j bundles
or packed in cartons. Any loose
waste paper should be packed in
cartons and securely tiedi,
House-to-house collection of tin
and paper will be made in Salem
n Sunday afternoon, May 27.
Thirty volunteer trucks with driv
ers will be manned by more than
200, Boy . Scouts to cover the city.
! Members of the Salem Chamber
fJ5?
sue vtiij wxu iiauuir luautiisj ui uic
ears; , . .
- Tin cans will be loaded at the
main entrance to the , state fair
grounds .on . the Silverton road.
Paper will be loaded at the corner
of Trade and, Suth .Church
streets.' Residents of any ' district
of Marion or Pplk countfes not
served by a local salvage Commit
tee are asked to' take tin cans or
paper to these locations for load-lnf-i
t ! " .
House-to-house pickup of cans
and j paper will be made in all
communities outside of Salem on
Saturday, May 28.
Oregon TTill Defer
Ship Rtpair Workers
Oregon's selective service head
quarters has disclosed it will co-
operate with national directives to
defer registrants working at ship
repair yards in the state. !
Local boards will be notified of
the order promptly. i
War manpower commission la
bor recruiters will renew! efforts
to get workers for Portland-Vancouver
: yards, the WMC office
said; today. j ;
Berlin Will Conform
With Moscow Time
LONDON, May 22.(JP)-A proc -
lam t ton by the Russian military
commander of Berlin, broadcast
today on the Berlin radio, ordered
, Berlin reilnta
clocks ahead one hour to conform
with Moscow time.
Ballet Winner
BALTIMORE, May 22
Leading through ou" Mrs.
R. H.
Heigh's pony Ballet, co-holder f
tha : Pimlieo track record for six
furlongs, won the $5000 Carroll
purse today by length! and a
quarter over Vincent Cicero's Rav-
al Flush, the favorite ot the crowd
of 14,197.
CLAKK WILL FLY TO U.
CHICAGO, May 22 -(JFy- Gen.
Marx w. uarK, American com
mander whose Allied forces beat
the "Germans in Italy, will fly to
Chicago from Europe fori a Me
morial day celebration, the army
disclosed today.
Tod Ixta to Classify
PLEASES
! . '
fkca evi for your
PAPI3 IS A VAR
i -
i ROC3SS kooashold fumitur. Inc.
1e. wtthf ffiachtna. Ralph, Kobta
aon, Bt UX Crraia. Ora.
MODEL A eu". ttres. Must sell
r
; .v, x l r
. 'v V - 1
V: " V 1
- :-:
;: v
- i
' - ' V' w , .
. -j . -. ,.-KMnm . j --"
SILVERTON Pvt. Jennie Fran
ces Goodman. WAC,. gradaate
f gilverton high school, Mt.
Angel normal school, taaght at
Molalla the year before enlist
ing. She la new 1 stationed at
Santa Menlea. She Is a daugh
ter ef Mr. and Mrs. John Good
man, 503 Lincoln.
King Brothers
Meet in Italy
WITH THE FIFTH ARMY, It
alyFor the first time in four
years T. Sgt. Vernon B. King met
his brother. Cpl. Lawrence M.
King, in Italy. The men are from
Scio, Oregon. They have met three
times since.
Both men are in the Fifth army.
'We have been very fortunate
in being able to get togther so
often," said Vernon. We trade concentration of tanks." mother Mrs. Charles L. Norton,
home news when we meet," re- The second two jflights bombed lives on route 6, Salem, and Nich
marked Lawrence. the woods, then strafed. Mean- olas Jf. Zolotoff, 20, seaman 2-c,
Vernon, a member of the 316th
medical battalion, 91st "Powder
River" division, has been overseas
12 months, while Lawrence, who
serves with the 34th air depot
ffrouo. was In combat 27 months.
livM in Astoria.
Oregon.
Vernon's wife, Bernice, and their
16-months-old son live in Scio.
A third brother. Thomas, is
fighting in the South Pacific with
the navy.
of Merit
Given Instructor for .
Assistance to Navy
Presentation of a certificate of
merit to George' El Brant Salem
high school instructor, was made
Monday by "Mel Kennedy, recruit
er in charge of the Salem recruit
ing facility, In recognition of
"meritorious service as an honor
ary recruiter in connection with
the procurement of applicants for
the naval forces."
The " navy department's ack
nowledgment of Brant's activities
as a civilian recruiter, is one of
few issued in Oregon for out
standing a ccomplishmen t in the
recruiting field since the begin
ning of the war.
NORMAN, OkU. -(Special) -
Naval Aviation Cadet James
Courtney Jones, son of Mr and
Mrs. James C. Jones, 396 Hoyt
St Salem, Ore has been trans
ferred to the naval air station,
Corpus Christ!, Tex., 'after suc
cessful completion of the primary
flight training course at the U. S.
naval air station here. After three
months of advanced flight train
mm4sSsi 1ifatiAA4 li rt
ing, Cadet Jonas will pin on his
wings as a naval aviator and be
commissioned as an ensign irfthe
naval reserve or second lieuten-
lant in the marine corps reserve.
Dr. and Mrs. Harry Brawn have
received a cablegram from their
l00' Brown ,Myin h!
was in London on furlough and
was with his brother, First Lt
Lewis Brown of the air corps. The
brothers had not met - for four
years. Private Bob Brown has
been in combat duty with the Sev-
enth army in France and Germany
ior we past nine monuu. nc ca
blegram was .the . first word the
Browns had since before V-E day.
TUxNEK PFC Herman O
Busch and Sgt Vernal F. Busch,
sons oi Mrs. janma suscn, wnoi""" mcvuwuaucui uim w
iv I operations, where; he mA 1U
I have returned to their posts.
mwm wwu-uviuv vu nil llllglMi
Mr. and Mrs. K. W. Mason.
Beech ave., have received word
that , their son, Pvt Ralph Ma
son, is in France. He has been
in the service since October, 1J44.
Mr. and Mrs. Mason have two
other sons in the service. First
Lt Harold Mason, with the air
force in Italy, and PFC Norton
30f
Jack Haley - Harriet HiUard
Otsie Nelsoat Band
TAKE IT BIG"
Plus
Tern Conway
"FALCON IN MEXICO
German Prison' Camp
Horrors Revealed :
Cominr 8atarday. May 21
I, '
0 f
Oregon Pilots
Force Town
To Surrender ,
": ' :a: h I - ' -A
NINTH AIR FORCE FIGHTER-BOMBER
BASE, Germany
Three west ! coast jP-47 Thunder
bolt flight leaders, 'who live with
in a radius j of 50 i miles, recently
figured in a once-in-a-flyer's-life-time
siunt with a fourth Pacific
coast pUot s ' '
The three members or tne
373rd fighter-bomber group, now
based east of the! Rhine river
are 1st Lt Philip IL Johnson, 22
Portland, Ore. whi led the squad
ron of 18 Thunderbolts on armed
reconnaissance in ! t h e Mehmke
area; 1st Lt.1 Staryl C. Austin, Jr.,
24, Salem, Ore., and 1st Lt Rob
ert C;: Finley, 22, Vancouver,
Wash. These threes flew Thunder
bolts. f 1! I
Tht J jourth, Mar George E. A.
Reinburg, 27, Coronado, CaliL,
used to fly; a Thunderbolt On
this mission; -as ground controller
in the area, ne piloted an cud 1
and led them to the target: the
town oi Menrnae.
Two : nights went down from
owv I eel as rvemourg circiea
2500. observing thi results.
Said fAustin: "The major was
a one-man cheering section. He
called tis off the tkrget after two Okinawa (Delayed) Two Wfl
flights had bombed and said that lamette valley men were aboard
white flags : were I going up, our this veteran battleship when she
troops only 100 yards from the poured a withering torrent of high
town w had bombed moving explosive shells into the Okinawa
in." f beaches as a unit of the great
'Then," Squadron Leader John-
added. ''Major! Reinburg led
to some Voods north of the
town and told us to dive-bomb a!
while, Reinburg in his flimsy L-5 1
was picking up siinall arms fire
from, the ground. The flyers took
care of "that land headed for home I
with the din of the Californian's
cheers Still in their ears.
Austin, in the artny since Sep-
tember, 1942, is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Staryl C- Austin, srl,
route three, box 740, Salem.
William MathlS on
Leave From l)uty at
Sea With Navy
as " " I
William Mathis, signalman 3c,
who has spent mostj of the last 10
months at sea, is spending a leave
in Salem. He is the son of R. W.
Mathis . and Mrs. Loreen Mathis,
and formerly was employed by
The Oregon Statesman. .
Mathis, who went into the navy
18 months ago, has; been with an
amA nurH nn Wrrhnt Khl
and was on the ground floor in
the invasion of Morotai. He has
also been in the Marshalls, Gil
berts, Solomons, New Guinea, In
dia, Egypt, Tunisia and many o th
er islands and ports
in circling the
world.
SrWCifibJK
take
return from the service, will re
port to Treasure Island late this
month. 3 i I
, -J ,
I ttOOert UOdge
Freed From NaZW
I
S. B. Dodge of the Spring Val
ley community has received word
that his son, PFC Robert Dodge,
nas oeea reieasea rrora xne uer
man prison where i he was held
for several weeks. jThe informa-
I U ' A . I J
uh uu w m (American ea
Cross and brought no informa
tion as to Dodge's physical condi-
I tion.
BETHEL g. Sat. Clyde M.
Johnson, son'; of Mr,, and -Mrs. J.
W. Johnson of this district, has
been transferred to Cherry Point
North Carolina. He served In ma
rine aviation;; on Guam for two
years, completed a four year en
l .
unen ana jnas now signea up
for another two years. Sergeant
Johnson,! on his return from Guam
in the "fearly spring was married
in San Francisco and visited his
parents here t time
FORT DOUGLAS, LTUh-( Spe
cial) -First Lt. Earl I Johnston, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. John
ston, 145, Park st, Salem, has ar-
P?1 tete9 00 leave
1 - ..... . '
moQuu wimrine lam Army air
force as navigator on a B-24. He
completed 51 'combat missions. -
SEATTLE, iWaah4(Speciai)-En-
sign Verla Lucile Carter of Stay-
mm
recently in the navyj Nurse corps,
has been ordered to active duty at
the naval .hospital, I Treasure Is-
I land, San Fransico.
204f HL W. ihahl
STOT
TCZSDAY. MAY 29
mmm m mi anew aaM a Smm. toa
It SJAYS FH.Yt
MlCtSl $J, $1.75, $2.19,
. ia fa lactases)
SSATS t:07!
(Sary, as
J. K. C.U. CO.
8.TT. Stark at jSth SL
tm 9. iwi
rosTLAi. j tea;
Thm OSEGOM STATESMAN, Sodem,
: V. .- -?i
: : v ::
; 1' ' . r : A'
;-: - J ...J
CENTKAL HOWELL Ensign Ro
bert L. Simmons will receive
his' naval aviators wings May
: 25 at Corpus Chrfsti, Tex and
: so! to his new base at Green
Cote, Springs. Fla. Ensign Sim
mons was a student at Willam
ette smiversity for two years
before called for Induction. He
; la I son ef Mr. and Mrs. C. L.
Simmons of this community.
np H -r n af
1 WO Valley MW1
gi "D sal !
Ull DattleSlllp 111
i
UKinaWa ACllOll
Aboard a U. S. Battleship Off
navalf bombardment force in his-
tory. $
They were Kenneth W. Pur-
cell. Seaman 2-c, USN, whose
USNR, whose father, John S. Zolo-
toff, lives on star route 6, Salem.
So accurate and devastating was
the task force fire that marines
and lpth army troops encounter
ed only slight opposition when
they landed.
Highlight of the ship's actions
came j during an air attack. One
of the enemy planes broke through
the sheet of anti-aircraft fire, and
singled out this battleship for a
suicide run. Seconds later a cheer
went up from gunners and crew
men when a hit sent the plane
flaming into the sea.
MIAMI, Fla.-(Special) -Mrs.
Alice 'Harger, wife of T5 Ralph
E. Harger, 27, Albany, Ore., can-
get out the red plush carpet. Aft
er 31' months in Africa, he is
headed home. He was flown to
the States in a fleet ATC plane.
The ; 27-year-old soldier ' served
v " ...
the quartermaster corps in
the middle eastern theatre of oper
ations.! Pvt. Herbert C. Harold, weund-
ed in action March 10, was hos
pitalized in France and the Pur-
pie Heart awarded to him was
is making her home with her par-
pnt Mr. and Mn P B HnHcr.
son. 2265 North Fifth st. In civil-
ian life. Harold was employed by
t . '
Loder Bros
Acorns 3, Padres 2
OAKLAND, May 22.-()-Oak-
land's ' Acorns won tha onninr
it - -
game of their series here with the
San Diego Padres in a ten-inning
-.m, which n, W-,
Acorn center fielder, scored the
I "I
winning run after Vic PIcetti
smashed one which San Diego
found . too hot to handle.
San Diego 001 001 000 02 7 1
Oakland -000 000 110 13 14 1
Ferguson and Ballinger; Strom-
me; Chetkovich and Fenech.
Troops Called in Tieup
nr w .
ui VAicago s LnverS
CHICAGO, May 22-Troops hnag, which circulates bartie
encamped on Chicago s lake shore I tilrl-r imonf ritv off.Vial.f
s" u xcuci mi wiervenuon
was expected in a truck drivers'
strike which has tied up food and
vital materials for nearly a week
in a dispute over wages and hours.
Effects of the. walkout of 6500 in-
-1 -jm a.
being felt beyond the metropolitan
ucpengeni union members were
I Jl
NEIV FRUITY
UU(ATIVE
By relieving conatipatkm en
tirely through tun-ripened
leaves mod fruits, TAM helps
adMa.badbfwm.dul,
. TAM iuti. like
lass, acta kka a charm.
M4 trlMl
twit. itBM
'"M.St.Ma'i
Tasnaaurs
On Sale at Fred Meyer Drag
Section
1I N. Liberty -
Oregon. YeVfoecdoY Morning. Mar 23. 1943
Trimming Still
Needed to Get
Budget in Line
With $29J5828 yet to trim be
fore the general fund tax levy
mfflH within th a
4f?- vf-. i, 1
auvih utaiiuu luuiiii uuuk curii i
mittee goes into its second r- day
sessions today. 1
- . - ' ? l - t
Largest items left for considera
tion are grouped under the "wel
fare" heading, with a net increase
of more than . 150,000 asked, al-
though general assistance jrequests
are ?s3,uuu unaer tnose oi last
vmt A . ifift fwin ?n.M.J t nM
. i. i - . . .
age assistance funds and - $7000
more for aid to dependent chil
drenare included Inlthecategoryl
... t r
i ne committee, comprised by
County Judge Grant Murphy,
Commissioners Jim Sm i th and
Roy Rice; Leo N. Chllds of Salem;
M. G. Gunderson, Silverton, and
Ray J. Glatt, Woodbjurn, Tuesday
approved budget ' estimates sub-
mitted by the county agent's of-
fice (including horticultural In-
suector 4-H club a sent arid home
demonstration agent services) ; by
the recorder; schooliwpermtend-
en t, and sheriff, with the excep
tion of $284 cut fronj, the jrequests
of the sheriffs tax offices j:
Expenditure of' $800 for the
summer services of a water mas
ter,, appointed by the state engi
neer's office, and; of $240 for
predatory animal control were
added to the budget!
The school superintendent's re
quest included salary! for sin addi
tional .supervisor, while the sher
iffs budget provides! for Services
of a second crlminal deputjy. Only
major slash made Tuesday was
$2200 from the $62267 increase
sought for herd inspection.
Cooper Says
TBeeP Grows
' . . ! I -'
ST. LOUIS, May -(Mor-ton
Cooper, act right hand pitcher
for the St. Louis Cardinals, who
walked out on the club for the
third time last week, made It plain
today he wanted his 1944 con
tract renegotiated in more than
ial' ' Wins on!. : y i
i He declined to say What or how
inany demands he would present
in addition to the salary increase
except to announce that h wants
a three-year contract now!
Plan Double Ftinetal
For Mr. and Mrs. Powers
WOODBURN, May! 22.-A dou
ble funeral will be held Thursday AZw. Coilm Cfna
for' Mr. and Mrt. Hamilton -Lrir duur "P8
Sr.ower ?..p: T ' r"ssf"
fnnner wiu oe in charge Ot the
Service and burial will be made
at Belle Passi. Mrs. Powers was
killed in an automobile collision
jlast Thursday.. May j 17 and be
died 24 hours later as the result
01 injuries. t
3
New Salea. Bmtd to
BB Delivered This Fall
I ! S
L DETROIT, Mich., May
Delivery of six of 34 busses Or-
dered by Oreeon Motor Stases for
Salem and Eugene, Ore., service
probably will be made the last
quarter of 1945, General Motors
truck and coach division said to-
i i n rst nr tr nm.r will
:i .. 1 . .
HiivrH ws.n .aii9Ki. rL..i
Motors said.
-n m-m wt w m m uvuu caa
Magazine Features
Salem Traffic Study
8 . h
j Salem's -traffic survey,! study!
Conducted under auspices ;of the
National Safety council here last
Winter results of which were pre
sented in thick pamphlet form to
hnemt of. the city council Mon-
I iuaw i sudjcc o
quarter page article in the Current
issue of American City, national
Get the Jap! Get It Over!
sTirfnrla
OPENS f :45 P. ML
NOW PLAYING!
TK1
lu;(as
'imnnnnPf
uiiniiouir
tusill
E
. i v
'sdcdfcJjP
ON the HOME FRONT
By ISABEL CH3LDS
Alderman Tom Armstrong had
laerman Tom Armstrong naa i
Uv K.t - 4 w v-.
TT - , jt. v..
nm airpanT Knpwiin uriswifi . uufc i
he's one of the veterans on the
city council now and probably
none of his fellows realized that
V
During, depression years Arm-
strong declares . h Iwaa ."Uterally
doing business on the sidewalk"
j .u........ v: I t.u
"""""n " uwwu w
him he had to take his service
station off the parking there was I Group therapy is tha best man
an ordinance. Curious (and kinda ner m wbich the problem of the
angry), Armstrong decided he'd
-;ii
" v "ma"1" w
on the books, so he ran for coun-
d-Hmd he's heen there ever since.
- .
question? He merely que
ied during Monday night's coun-
session whether there wasn't
9X1 ordinance forbidding establish-
ent of advertising signs on park-
ins or sidewalks. He asked it for
fri.!!
uw icaiuug (iusi iui nan i
the rest of the council.
Youths Admit
Stealing Auto,
Robbing Store
Two 15-year-old Salem boys: and
a Gervais 16-year-old. arrested by
state poUce Monday night and
nr. i. a ii . j
theft of Alderman Tom Arm-
strong-s car nere J-noay nignt, tne
burglary of the Parrish store and
the larceny of a second car in
ruiU4UU wu oilluru-
Before they had stolen Arm-1
strong's automobue, they had at-
tempted to take several others,
rifling some, letting the air out of
tires, drinking the liquor they
found m glove compartments but
all the time intent upon burglary
of the store; according to police
reconstruction of the story the
youths told. After breaking, into
the store, they drove to Hubbard,
where they spent the remainder
of the night, and at dawn stole
license plates from a wrecking
establishment, the police report
said. In Portland they abandoned Should' the tax proposal be de
the Armstrong car when it ran feated, the construction probably
out of gasoline and picked up
another which they abandoned
when it got stuck beside a road
near Woodburn, they are said to
hv told police
Tckkolonrl o
m..
LOUISVILLE, Ky May 22-JP)-
Air Sailor, Kentucky derby hope-
ful of Lt. Comdr. T. D. BuhL beat
five other prominent western can -
didates today in winning the $2500
Stoney Point purse, feature of
Keeneland's program at Churchill
downs.
Setting his own pace. Air Sailor
covered the seven furlongs in
135.4 to Beat Murlogg stable'j
fn Awt w "
Joe Chance in a blanket PhoU -
graph finish.
MEETING TODAY
-ALBANY, May 22-(ff)-County
J L..11V M ML . 1
1 ueuu guwwi wiu come nerv w-
J morrow for the annual Oreeon
i -
Health Officers association meet
ing in Linn county courthouse.
Get the Jap! Get it Over!
Housi U mW r e.f
uisiarYi
OPENS t:4S P. M. -
NOW PLAYING!
. A world oi fun with
the Jenny Lbad oi me Oxark
piney-woodsl
Jfc.
JODY CAIIOVA
THRILL CO-HTTI
HARD I
4 a'.',
I at -I
Ways to Aid
Se
rvicemeii
Are Explained
Independence, rest and : quiet,
mingling with their I amuie. ana
- ...
life in the country nave wu'"-
ntpd most to the improvement of
I . .r I I urVTMl
. i
soicaers
use i psycruami;
. This has been thovm in a qu-1
finnnA ir answered by men iol
Innrinlf thttir HlSCharffe. Dr. "B. F.
..- mvmh(. af the Oregon
U, waff Tnembers of the
Marion county Health Associa-
..
at the annual meeting lasi
W
veteran from the war with a psy-
. a. . i
chiatric condition can oe ucaicu,
Drr Williams said. K .
Tinkham Gilbert president of
the associaUon, presiaeo. oauue
Orr Dunbar, executive secretary
of the Oregon Tuberculosis asso-
ciation, was introduced and spoke,
The age group most affected by
tuberculosis is longing in the
state, Saidie Orr Dunbar, execu-
ru
wauua
more men are lisiea as vicuna. -
iigures on me iu iau
sale last year were announced by
me speaker, xue iwic
fion was $14,96828.94, for Ore -
son S246.277.57 and for Manon
county, $15,060.14. Other mid val
ley county figures were linn, $7,-
630-22: VamhilL $6,050.59; Polk,
$3,805.19; Benton, $4,386.33
PlaHS PrOCecd
i .. , ,
f . Or AuCutlOIlS
lQ JJeaf oCIlOOl
WorkIng lans- for a 268,000
1,, ciassroom and dormi-
tory buuding at the sUte school for
the deaf here were authorized
Tuesday by the state board of con-
troL Wolff and Phillips, Portland
architects, were Instructed to pro
ceed ; with their preparation and
to bring plans before the board
next month.
Against this proposed expend!
ture the 1945 legislature appropri-
ated $125,000. If the voters at the
June 22 special election approve a
five-mill property tax for new
buildings at state institutions and
colleges, the remainder of the fin
j ancing will have been arranged,
board members indicated
I be curtailed to a dormitory
I ouiiamg unless tne state emerg-
ency board gives financial assist-
I ance-
Registration Light
For June 22 Vote
Orders for June 22 cnerfal
Uon ballots in Marion county have
been nlaced on the haxia nf aM
election figures because registra -
"on in recent weeks has been so
light as to be negligible.
1 To this declaration, following
this declaration, following
of the registry Tuesday night,
ft White, elections deputy in
1 close
Gladys
County
Clerk Henry Mattson's
organization, added that approx
imately two-dozen persons had
isglstered Tuesday. The clerk's
office, open three hours after the
usual closing time to accomodate
would-be voters, served three or
.nt . ....
I books reopen Saturday, June 23.
nS IKk Iu! Rmt Mar TLand
n Iba,
- CONT. FROM 1 P. M. -
NOW SHOWING!
VxW ili
CP1
nirmn.i cainTi
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iTiiikliam Gilbert
Reelected Head
Oil Health Group
Tinkham Gilbert was reelected
n resident of the. Marion county
healtti assooauon u
meeong " VT
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; other officers named were Mrs.
h C.Imv. -Tint M
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presitieni; wrs. xwuuu,
Woodburn, second ve pres.dent;
Bessie Edwards, secretary.
EL tBurr Miller was named Sa
lem Seal chairman and Dr. Henry
.mollis, uuuu wouuuui. un.
n.A rw.
Stanley Kruger was renamed Mar-
ion county seal sale chairman.
Executive secretaries lh attend-
ance J rtedJEtuby Bergs.
I fariAn' T?thl Poll. Yamhill: Mrs.
V
Kingston, Multnomaht Mrs. j.
Farmer, Clackamas, i f
a cnecK xor o ior eigm n
club scholarships was presented to
James Bishop, Marion county club
agent by Harry Scott in beha!f
Cf the association. Bishop outlined
briefly how; the scholarships were
awarded for the 10-day summer
-UI" i " . . . 1 v
i - Music was proviuea ior.uie pro-
gram by three high school stu-
I dents' James Ragland and Morris
McFJelL wno gang, G1adjg
vmnan!t
It - ? -
Contracts for
4 Teachers
Are Offered
j
Salem school directors Tuesday
night jvoted to offer contracts to
Helen B. McLeod, Rainier; Lois
V. Bljomster, Excelsior. Minn.;
Audrai Ames, Brookings, S. D.; and
Helen ' Reep, Pipestone, Minn; to
I teach n elementary schools.
Betty Johnson, now teaching at
Ontario, was hired as home econ
omics I teacher, anL Georgia Row
ell, wfio is taking graduate work
at Willamette university, as teach
er of j junior high school English.
inej resignation of Kutn Peter-
son, Highland teacher,, was ac
cepted.
A list of more than 4C0 seniors
was approved for graduation, pro
viding! final requirements are met.
Both junior highs and the high
school: are making pretarations to
commence classes the first day ef
school this falL Sup t Frank B.
Bennett told the board. By re
registering of pupils and arrang
ing class schedules . during - the
summer, two days may be saved.
he said. i
The board agreed to let Russell
Bros, circus use Leslie field June
14-15 for $150 rentaL plus ostin
of $150 bond . guaranteeing that
J1 newly-leveled ground will not
be disturbed. It had nreviouslv
1 qepietf tte request
II BUY BONDS 7th WAR LOAN
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V&'l IL"1 I I I I 14 3
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TODAY AND THURS.
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4- CO-FEATURE
BX8CKSS3Y
cnTYKUTTCK
SOfOrYTVITSai
Bey Bonds 7th War Lean
STARTS TODAY
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COAST
TO
COASfll
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i 4- COEATDRE ;
IT
COMING FRIDAY i
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IATXST , NEWS FLASHES!
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