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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1946)
,1 ) I I .- f I Tha OREGON STATESMAN. Solam. Oraon. Wadnaadcry Morning. April 10. 1946 AGE SEVEN, 1 r J j1 V I t I i . M - t r t!- i WCTU Plans Meeting Friday In Silverton StLVTRTON, April .-(Spccial) . Tha VTCTU will me Friday, ,230. p. m. at the First Christian church. This Is membership day and a special invitation is extend ed ta Silverton women. Mrs. M G. Gunderson is president. The Loyal Women of the Chris tian! church meet Wednesday at 1020 with Mrs. William Haver nick in Waldo Hills. Mrs. T. E. Preston has been president for six years. ': Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Hall were the inspiration for a housewarml Inc Sunday at their new place. -450 1W. Main. They recently moved, . to town from Silverton Hills. The truest brought turkey dinner for "the j bouse maiming. The euests .were the George Towes, Arthur Gottenbercs, William Bloehs, Rob- ' ert Aliens. Harry Thompsons and - Davis Reisigs. - Lloyd Mundorff, recently dis charged from the navy has, en rolled at Oregon State college. Virginia Stevens, home service director i American Red Cross, was guest speaker at the Rotary -club here Monday. - tEd Holderi' is a patient at St. Vincents hospital, Portland where ' he has been for six tteeks. IVIehrcr Visits In North Dallas NORTH DALLAS, April -(Special) -Mr. and Mrs. A. C. "Wall were visited by their neph ew Ensign Elmer Mehrer of the anercbant marine Saturday. He came by a plane from Portland. JJehrer also visited his grandpar ents, the Rev. and Mrs. Jacob Wall of Dallas while here. Mrs. David Builer. who recently uttered a stroke, was slowly im proving for a Awhile, but is not so well avow. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Classen and daughter Arleta, were Sunday - truest of Mr. and Mrs. William Tfiebert and family of the Ellen dale district. Mr. and Mrs. David H. Schultz and family of Dallas route 2 were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs, A. C, WalL ; KEDS LEAD IN ITALT ROME, April S.-JVSocialists and communists, displaying atrength in urban centers, retained the lead today in returns from Sunday's municipal elections. Re turns from 393 communes gave leftists 3230 council seats and 196 communes against 2701 council eats and 155 communes for the rightists and centrist parties. CASTLE P EI1I L T7AVEHS 3S 1st NaUanal Bank Bldg. Pfccne 3SS3 Gee. Beraerger. Maeatee Waves aad Billing Keeter Waves OPERATORS ZANA. BLANCHE AND ETHEL A EIHcieal Service ! PREPARE FOR Spring ! DRIVING NOW Factory Trained Mechanics Ilarisa Ilclsrs Inc. r Sales NASH Servtee S4I CsaekeU St Ta. 7S1S , 7 mm Dress Up Your Windows Oflalaaaaa order IX sa. tC per bllad) l Teatlae Washable unison SHADES We turn titem. repair them, or make tbesn to size. m DemMdi1 & Levis VENETIAN BLINDS 560 Sooth 2Iat S Our New Phone No. 31 4S Spy Suspect I A. .J..-.W-. ...4 I A ..' .... -'r s 1 r w WUEalZBERG. Geramaay; April Maaeieiae Caraaeael (aaeve). storsay petrel eT Freach-Ualiaa dlplaniatie circles aad fries ef -My BeaUe" Mesaellal dartag the pre-war pertad when she was kaewa la the Paris literary world as Magaa ee Featanges. is bring held ea charges ef espionage, after her arrest. - ST WirepheU) Mussoliiirs Lady Friend Held as Spy - - j PARIS, April 9 -f-Madtleine Coraboeuf, beautiful 41-year-old friend of the late Benito Musso lini, was in jail last night on a charge of intelligence with the enemy. - She wits arrested lait night on a court- warrant which charged her name wl fournl on a German list of persons who had the con fidence 'of Italian fascist circles. The brunette actress, known to the pre-war Paris theatrical world as Magda de Fontagnes, was quot ed by court attaches as saying she wished she "could have been killed by the side of my old friend ( ( Musolini ) , instead of Clara Petacci" 11 Duces mistress who was executed with him. Magda. who caused a sensation in 1937 when she fired two re volver shots and wounded Count Charles De Cham brim, French ambassador to Rome, because he revealed her friendship with "my Benito" was seized at her home at Pouille-Ies-Coteaux, a few miles from here. Court officials said she insisted she could have made Mussolini a friend of France if she had not been expelled from Italy as a result of the De Chambrun in cident. Ronald SlevTpns Sbrfl Usedjby Science Clas NORTH HOWELL, April - (Special) The new machine shed on the Ronald Stevens farm was the scene of a general science les son Wednesday when upper grade pupils of4he North Howell school visited it for a class period. Ste vens explained construction de tails and measurements. The shed, is all aluminum cov ered and the sheets of metal are nailed to the studding with lead topped (or headed) nails. The building is JO x 70 feet and 12 feet high at the eaves Three large double doors on the north side are wide enough to permit the entrance of the grain com bine, heavy trucks and other ma chinery. The entire floor is cement five inches thick with a 10 foot wide apron of cement alt along the en trance. The aluminum was made in Washington state, then sent back to the middle west to be rolled and grooved, but strike condi tions delayed the order for some time. This is the first large all metal building in this district and introduces locally a new method of construction. Installed Made To Measure WEATHER STRIPPING An experienced weather stripper is available to give you a first class job. u Students Visit With Parentsat Lyons Homes LYONS. April t. -Spectin-Betty Jean Bodeker. cadet nurse, spent the week end with her', par ents, the Alex Bodeker s. tlelen Co rum of Silver Lake was with her. Mrs. Daisy Johnston with Mrs. Nora Taylor spent the week end in Salem. Mrs. Taylor was a guest of her sister, Mrs. Grace Maring, and Mrs. Johnston of her sister, Mrs. Bertha Wood worth. Mr. and Mrs. James Nye and eon have moved to Hillsboro where he will be employed on a farm there, Mrs. Hensley of Kansas came Sunday and will visit her son Ear)? Hensley and his wife. Mr. and Mrs. George Hubbard left Tuesday for Oak Ridge where they will be employed. They were accompanied to ' Eugene by their daughter, Mrs. George Huffman who visited her sister, Mrs. Clar ence Decker and at the Hal How ards in Junction City. Bob Fetherston has gone to Prineville to be employed in a sawmill. ' : ' ' Mr. and Mrs. arl Hampton of Salem visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Bodeker Sunday. Fred Hester f Salem visited relatives in Lyons and Fox Valley Saturday, while! enroule to 'Mill City. ' ARC Nutrition Group to Meet The nutrition committee. f Marion county chapter, American Red Cross, will: meet at 1 pjn Wednesday in chapter headquar ters with its new chairman, Mrs. David Eason, In: charge. Appointment of Mrs. Eason to the post was, approved by ' the chapter board of directors this week. Other matters before the board meeting included a full re port on the recent successful 1946 fund campaign, given by Dr; E. E. Boring, drive chairman, and a talk by Mrs. Alice S. Prall, special Red Cross representative working with college units. Mrs. Prall pointed out what the local chapter could do to aid the Willamette .university Unit. Jack Wills Dies At Silverton SILVERTON. April 9 (Special) John "Jack" Wills, resident of Si I, verton and Mt. Angel for many years, died at a Silverton hospital Tuesday afternoon. Funeral ar rangements are , being made by Ekman funeral home. He leaves his father. Joseph Wills, a brother, Tom Wills, and two sisters, Mrr. Catherine Lfttel and Mrs. Marie Kanners, all of Silverton. MISSOUKI LKAVES TLKKET ABOARD UJS.S. MISSOURI. April --PJ-After four days of tumultuous welcome by Turks, the V S. battleship Missouri left its anchorage today at Istanbul j and headed clown the Dardanelles to-, ward the Greek harbor of Piraeus. v&gM iJl yi ' s r riVrTll Ask your friends over $jT V lSW. 1 for Coke and Music tXSA 0-v -". Maac Utf tops by three top I . AMllJ I Xmn 1 . . every week. 1 IV J sssasw am. COCA-COLA BOTTLING COIIPAIFY OF Grandmother Admits Killing Husband After rLifc of Fear'' MKDFORD, Ore . April t,-(.1 A 40 year-old gntndmotlter charged with murder of her husband declared Uiy that "I was forced to do what I did I've gone through hell for the last twenty years." The ranch woman, "Mrs. Clara May HuUheson, was arraigned in justice court today on a first degree murder charge filed by I Assistant District Attorney Allison the hearing until Wednesday af ternoon, when she will have an attorney, was granted by Justice W. P. Tucker. Sheriff Howard Gault and State Police CapL Paul Parson said she admitted shooting her ' husband yesterday while driving along a highway the day after she said he threatened her life. Lived l Fear Mrs. Itutcheson told a reporter today t,ie had, lived , in fear of her husband since her son now 21 was five months old. Once, she said, he stood with a knife touching the baby's throat and told her: "See what's going to happen to you if you don't do what I want you to do." She declared she had taken knives and guns from him "more times than I can remember" even a gun "which he was holding at his own mother's head." Hutch eson's mother, a deaf mute, lived with the family at their Eagle creek 'farm. I don't care what happens to me now. she said. "All I care about is ray kids . . when I woke up this mommg I thought. 'I must get up and m!k. Then I remembered I was in Jail and I went back to sleep " The sheriff and Police Capt. Parson said Mrs. Hutcheson ad mitted firing a .18 pistol, conceal ed in her purse, at her husband as they drove in a truck toward Medford Hutcheson, thinking the gas tank had exploded, climbed out wounded, the nffitnaU said, and Mrs. Hutcnesim drove back to tier faim for her on . Hutcheson was found dying on the roadside. IN THE DHIVEv5.S SEAT X4s V the neiv and Music that's cops by three top bands the same big three every week. SAI.FM. OREGON Moulton. Her request to postpone Woman Injured In Fall on Walk NORTH HOWELL. April -(Special) -Mrs. Mary Stevens fell on a slippery board walk last week and injured her shoulder. She is being cared for at the borne of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs Ward Manning near Gervais, and hat Iter arm l and upper side in a cast. Mrs. Stevens and son. Ted. have been living on the Erpeiding place since they sold the home farm, and have purchased a place in Gervais where they were prepar ing to move when the accident occurred. Lloyd Patterson, who has been with the army in Europe for two years, has been discharged and Is now at home. His sister, Mrs. Ar thur Impecoven, honored, him Sunday with a family dinner at the Impecoven home.. Present were Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Patter son. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Patter son, Mr. and Mrs. Impecoven and Grant Impecoven. The North Howell grange Home Ec club met Wednesday at the grange hall. The spring 'low er show netted $200. to be applied on the E' triK building fund. Nesjt. Friday the Central Howell club I meets at North Howell grange hall for a corsage making demonstration. All interested in Dowers and their arrangement in various forms are cordially in vited. The Rev. and Mrs. G. E Mr Garvey. who have been stauVjrted in Canada, are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. August Woelke. THE ROADSTAND HOPPER . . . makes more stops than a milkman, can't resist hot dog stands and peanut roasters. Makes stopping for RPM Corn pounded Motor CHI - a habit, too, because its "dofoamcr" prevents air bubbles that may hinder circulation... other compounds keep engines clean er, stick to hot spots, stop sludge and corrosion. A STAN DAIP OP CALIFORNIA PRODUCT greater OREGON 1 1 i 71 Platform Shoes Prove Infantile Para CLEVELAND, April t-VMrs. Sidney Hunt, ZD. whom doctors described a city hospital's worst infantile paralysis victim, is "walking" : these days, strapped to her husband and uti.( a unique pair of platform shoe ' I te invented. The shoes are a wooden box -like affair on which she stands and into which her husband slips his feet. Then, with their legs strapped together, they move about the room, "At first three step forward and three to the ' rear were her limit," Hunt; a j publicity director for an advertising firm. said. "Lately, however, she has been able to move about ISO steps as the result of strength gained each day." ; " "Her arm rest on mine and her hands in mine and we move about somewhat like we are dancing ex cept that we both are facing the same direction,' he added. Sub Sifiliter lo Sink iMostjtiitos HILO. lUwaii. Feb. H4)-Lt. Donald Francis! Mason, who sent the famous message sigh ted sub, sank same" as a navy petty offi- cer in the early days of the war, was given a new bombing as signment today. With a crew of seven. Mason wiU borab-spray HI lo'i Udal wave-wrecked waterfront with D D T. as a precaution against an outbreak of disease. SPRINKLING SYSTEMS WE HAVE THE BEST Maaaal. Reeal-Aateat ec Fell Aeteeaatle . C. S. Whitcomb Co. 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