i PAGE FOURTEEN Jrhe OREGON STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon. Sunday Morning, September Z, 1S4S ,'C-'' ' ( r,' it". rV, -.,---;- ?-,--'" '",''-;' . V --' ':'':-(". . ' 1 ; ;: r ram i lie aiarcsmaii s ..tjommumiY'-uurresuumivnis . , .v Early Educational Venture Recalled by Citizens , Sublimity parish Will Be Host Next Week To Valley Guests When School Is Dedicated I, 1 fit II M U The new high school bulldinr at Sablimity. .which will be dedicated September 9. The bunding en the site of one or the first coUerce la OrefoD, Is also on the domain once ruled by Milton Wrlfht, fatber of the Wrlfht brothers of airplane fame. SUBJMITY, Sept. i--The new eight room St. Boniface high school Will be dedicate here at special ceremonies Sunday, Sept. 9. The new building is the lat est unit in a Catholic parish plant dating back to 1879. Rev. Peter Stampfl, Benedictine from Mt. An gel, was sent to take charge of the parish which he visited once a month. . . . The present parish has 160 fam ilies and mor than 250 pupils reg istered in the parochial grade and high school. The high school was established in 1938 and is a fully accredited four-year high school. The new building, completed1 free of debt, will be dedicated by Arch bishop Edward D. Howard next week. A field mass will be celebrated, weather permitting, and later the women of the parish will serve a homemade sausage dinner. The school plant will be completed by the grade school building erected in 1913. Sublimity has special signifi cance as an educational center Silverton Airport Rebuilt; Alfred Adams Now Instructor SILVERTON An airport is being re-built at Silverton. Alfred I Adams, veteran flier and instructor, has purchased 22.74 acres of the old airport in Bethany district from John J. Moe who acquired the property when the airport was abandoned a few years ago. The ground has been surveyed, staked out and disked preliminary tor rehabilitation of the field. Drainage tile laid by the WPA while the city owned the airport, will be utilized in providing a solid runway. The air strip will be 300 feet wide and 3400 feet long, north and south. ! Two county graders, a carryall and a road roller have been prom ised for early use on the field. The air strip will be seeded with -alta fescue. A hangar to accommodate five planes is planned. Lack of quality aviation hardware may hold up the hangar temporarily. The old airport was operated by . the city from 1926 to 1940, and Valley Obituaries -Nathan E. Cole AURORA Nathan E. (Nate) Cole. 75. of Aurora, died Fridav morning at his home after an-illness of a few days. He was born October 21, 1869 at Turner, the son of the late John Peck and Mary Cole. He was married to Frances Beck in j 1893 at Aurora where they had since lived. Be - sides the widow, he is survive by , three sons jLester - of Portland, Eugene of Aurora, and Bernard rf Durkee; two daughters, Ruby Brusch of Vancouver, Wash., fend Lorene Ilastiie of .Hubbard; three I brothers, J. R. Cote of Molallaj A. ,B. Cole of Cbnby and Alva" ConJ tlit of Vancouver, Wash.; two Vis iters, Ms. Rebecca Miller of Port I land and Mrs. Claud . Nosier of illillsboro; 16 - grandchildren and one great-grandchild. , Funeral services will be held Sunday, Sept 2 at 2 p.m. at the Miller Funeral home in Aurora with burial in Aurora cemetery. had 'a government beacon and landing lights. Adams holds one of the first commercial airmen's certificates issued in Oregon and has -an in structor's rating issued in 1940., in conjunction with war training service teaching college boys to fly through civil aeronautics authority Supervision. The first New York newspaper, the New York Gazette, was pub lished by William Bradford in 1725. since it was the site of one of the first colleges in Oregon, erected by the United Brethren church In 1856. The existence of this col? lege was brief, but its glory re mains. Sublimity Is also famed as the home of Milton Wright, father of the Wright brothers. Mil ton Wright was the principal of the pioneer educational institution of the United Brethren church. The Sisters of St Mary of Ore gon 1 staff L the grade .and i high school, assisted by Rev.' Joseph Schbring, pastor of St Boniface and Rev. Ethelbert Mai, a Salva torian priest from Jordan and two lay i teachers. 1 School Will i open Sept 17. 1 Besides Archbishop Howard, special i guests i at the dedication ceremonies will be Rt Rev. Thom as Meier, OSB, and- Rt. Rev. J. Robertson, SJ, 1 Benedictine abbot from Mt. Angel and representa tive of Oregon Jesuit province, re spectively, s ,! f Vi this modern vapor mthod I that brings rtliti from th apatraa I I of Bronchial Aathma. Full rfun4 if I I not taUifitd. -.; I V CAUTION Vfnlyiihtct. r , """""" 1 . t. ! 1 I Opieratc on Eyes GATESy Sept 1 Mrs. Daisy Richards- is a patient at Salem General hospital where she un derwent an operation on her eyes this week. , . j I Dca'l Sliinp cii , Qcaliiy I- ' . ' i - ' : It ' doesn't . pay to "eeono mlxe" when your health la at stake! TUr oaf a by insisting- on duality IntTedl- cntt In all cases have all year prescriptions filled at SCHAEFEK'S Drug Store, where only the purest, high est quality lnrredlents are used? i ' . . -1945 10 Jmm mt En S!:rc riiono 5127 or 7C23 K3 IJorSi Commerctal- PACKED FOR OVERSEAS MAILIIJG i ' , - j. ' .;!.,! r ' 1 . - v f .- AM ; P j TQl In shipping carton j m V -O A 55 " ' !'; I ' .1 .- r. C sure vour lorvtcamflii ntt dt iImm l m.J -i I Mrs. Curry Js Scio Visitor SCIO Guest from Portland for the weekend at the . Melvin Sweet home In south Scio will be Mrs. George Curry. The Currys and the Sweets were neighbors a few years ago when the men were employed m highway construction in western land central Oregon. Curry joined the navy and is now at Okinawa. Having: recently completed summer course at Washington State nlversity Seattle June Cynis plans to resume work at Oregon State "college, Corvallis, as Junior, in mid-September. Miss Cyrus, daughter of Mayor arid Mrs. m. b.i Cyrus, was reared at Sdo and comrileted high school here.-;, : - t Z. September meeting of. 'Scio city council will be held Sept -4, as the regular meeting night falls on Labor day, a legal holiday in .this state. Newly - appointed Council man Bee Burton , is - expected to qualify as successor to D. W; Johnston, recently moved to To ledo. . " . ! . Wootls Accident : Results in Loss OfmHteFsLfeg a-. O GATES,- Sept 1 Harvey Kan-, off, 30, Injured his leg so severe- riday when caught 'between and the caterpillar' tractor lyjFri Pidrisg Y7ill Start ilejesi 241K5 ' " ; ''! I . . AT THE - - -t ' I LAHEDI100E OOP FAIIIIS Bus transportation each morning starting at 6 a. mj from the following stations: ; . i EASSSPI?,?AD AKD HIGirLAND AVENLTK CAPITOL AND MARKET STREETS 17TII AND MARKET STREETS :17TH AND CENTER STREETS . 17TH AND STATE STREETS ; WTII AND STATE STREETS ltTH AND MISSION STREETS . ' ' LESLIE SCHOOL r COMMERCIAL AND CENTER STREETS COMMERCIAL AND COLUMBIA STREETS i KEIZER SCHOOL - ' that it was necessary to amputate the leg." - ,KanoU,was talicn to EsJeri General : hospital where the - leg was amputated.. II was working In the whx'j" for the Kill City MantficturicjE Ca at tLa time o the ccklnt . .. , . ' r1.v-T ,- ,.U L1T.,.J.l1)trrlr " ..s.- MM aMMlHMIIltl lHTftl Side by side the men and womeia f our country have worked together, Justrs they have gone into the armed forces together. All have earned our special gratitude this Labor Bay. Oi t - k C sure your serviceman gets Ms share cf good ofd fashioned fruit cake . . shop at Wards now to make that October 15th deadline for overseas maiSngt Th Is a reaf fruit cake guaranUed to contain 65 fruits ond nwhl Wrapped In wax paper and seated m a tin box to keep Its flavor fresh . . packed in a heavy corrugated shipping container, to make it easier for you' to maUI Economically priced, too, for aO tis goodness! f. IMontgomery ; Ward i 1' . I i i i , i , if- r , x - ! , I - ' . t ' , . i f u sf.i-.'tL------" -TO' -;J . 5 iHJ!WL'. I'lAX . . 1' "r'' (sT tV i - ' ' ,st.- : r : . ' " . . . ,; .. - - j- . . - ; : : , :. -., . '" is one thing, yotrng Mrs. Jones declines to hunt. Instead, this afterT noon she will go to Wards, and see if today's shipments haye brought ia anything of interest. She may find what she's looking for. Or, she may have to come back. Or she may tell us her needs, and well notify her when her selection comes in. But she is no f going to traipse aH over town wearing out her shoes and her nerve? '' ., - ; f , ' . - . I . : ( . -i - She knows that furniture is being made. She knows that Wards is getting its share. ! - . .; Above all, she knows what she buys at Wards will be style-right, dependable: ana pncea to save ner money, xjocsh z jmuts. joncs iaca a MAKE IT A Imontgomei lard sound sensible? You too should . . . 1 e tv SHOP AT VARDS i?Oa FUITUaB .'A r i 1" u f i ... I . tr'