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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1946)
PAGE TWELVE The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon, Tuesday Morning. August 20, 1948 ? Mid-Willamette Valley News latxi Property Exchanges Prove Popular with Silverton Owners SIIA'ERTON, Aug 19 Sw;.p ir.f, rif prop-rty has bftnmc prev alent here it would se-m. An roun errient wa made Saturday i f the Txctar.ge of Srarth & son mill 1 North Water street. Seifer pur ! chased the property from the Hun gate Feed and Seed mill company some months ago at about the ' same time he and his partner bought the former Allen Garage rind turned it into the Seifer and Moll motor company, i Scarth will do bu-iness from will use the old Scarth mill prop erty to enlarge their motor busi ness which lies! immediately across the street from the former Scarth property. The new owners will dis mantle the old mill but do not plan to build until conditions are improved. Announcement was also made late in the week of the exchange of one of the former school houses for the city's hall park. the new building as well as retain the use of the warehouse for hop TVMf 'rts fur Tho A J Si fr , at" Fed and Seed mill property on rrofertv on North Nater and Silverton Library to Remain in City Hall Seifer & Moll Motor company WANTED - 3 IIEII C.(H)l) HOI KS - GOOD WACiES Apply in Person BUSICK'S MARION STREET SUPER MARKET SILVERTON, Aug. 19. Plans for Silverlon's new community center, the former Washington Irving school building, do not in clude the moving of the city lib rary, members of the library board state. The-library will remain in the city hall until such a time as the city or some organization can af ford to rembdel the former ration board office into a suitable lib rary, city officials said. The building; recently acquired by the city In an exchange for the McGinnis ball field, will be used for the chamber of commerce. Woman's club and other civic or- J ganizations. f Community Thinking Ursrcd By Farm Union President at Annual Summer Fete Sunday By Llllie B. Madsen Staff Writer. The Statesman The return of the community center rather than the beer parlor, the pool hall and the juke joint as a meeting place was urged by Jim Patton, national president, when some 300 Farm Union members met Sunday at Champoeg for their annual summer picnic. Ronald Jones, state president, was master of ceremonies. "We must stop dividing our interests into those of laborers, business men and farmers, and think in terms of community in terest," Patton insisted. "We can't think of peace as a whole unless we can think of community interests." he con tinued, urging his listeners to let Picture on pate 1 si i w1" Better Than Private Investigation There's an ancient way in which a purchaser might satisfy himself of clear title to land. That is through an exhaustive review of all deeds, wills, marriages, heirship and other documents by which the prop erty has been conveyed, mortgaged, leased or transmitted over a long period OfTiin. The purchaser of land who protects himself with a Commonwealth Insured Title avoids this endless detail, knowing, too, that no flaw will exist in the title to cause loss. ON ABSTRACT COMPANY Salem this interest seep through to the town, the county, the state and national affairs and on to the in ternational problems. General Interest Needed "Just because some of you live on the south side of the Columbia river, don't think thoe on the north side are at war with you in interest. You should all be in terested in the development of the resources of the entire region." Patton took for his overall topic "The World and Society in Tran sition." This Is a period, he said, when we mut do fresh plough ing and seeding in thinking. "We have come to a time," he explained, "when the people around the world are .neighbors, as you and I are. We are closer to people on the other side of the world than were the people living at Champoeg and in Cali fornia 100 years ago. "What is good for Dupont may not be good for the majority of the people," he continued, "but what is good for the small farmer or business man is very likely to be good for the majority of the world." Commodity Setup Sought A difference in cultural thought need not mean that peoples cannot find our own way of understand ing. Patton favored a world com modity corporation for stabiliz ing prices on f;trm basis and a world food board to see to it that national surplus products go tn places where people were stri ving. A universal system of edu cation and stabilization of cur rency on the world aI.o were favored. Senator Guy Cordon was un able to attend the picnic because of the illness of his daughter. jJim Smart. Salem, directed the community singing, and Mrs. T. M'oon of Woodburn was at the piiino. Special music was provided by Keith Blanchard, Portland, and his musical bells. tion picnic at Hager'e grove Sun day. During the afternoon an out door baptism was held for Joyce Brown, daughter of the William Browns. Monmouth Victor E. Winegar of Monmouth, son of the Clair Winegars of Salem, will teach the fifth grade and act as coach in the Harding school at Coos Hay the coming year. He has been attend ing OCE the last three yeais. j Four Corners Quests of the ( Charles Walkers are their daugh- ter-in-law, Mrs. Eerett Walker of Everett, Wash., and her daugh- i ter, Delores. ! ! Brooks Mary Wampler will ' entertain the Ciaideti club Wrd-nesday. I Five (uinatliaiiH to lie (iiM at State Fair i Five representatives of the Pa cific National exhibition of Van- I couver, B.C., will be guests of the , Oregon state fair here Sept. 5. Miss Ida E. Rae. secretary of the j ! group, informed Manager Leo J Spitzbart Monday that the Ca- ' nudian guests planned to visit the ! state fair sevetal davs Valley Briefs The flowers needed fr pet fumes come chiefly from Southern Europe. Silvrrlon Folk On MitJwrM Trip SILVERTON . Aug 19 Pan! Almquist arid hi hrolhri and r. mother. Mis. llcnintt.i Almjoit. left Sunday for St I'.miI anrid Chi cago for m aiiiin Almqiiit Mho is with (c.ixl & Adams line Mill it-turn in Un utili but l.i mother will remain fi a longr-i i-it in St. Paul Mr. and Mis. Andres Sola and infant son are going to Palo A ! -ta to teside. Sola t a pre-medio student at Starifoid He attended Willamette university Ixfoie the war yrais alid ha iei-n at the University of Washington rrnril Iv. Mr Sola is the fi.imer Aihim- IkII Jensen. ilaiiftili .f Mi Hans Jensen, nnd the late; ll..n Jensen if Sijwiton Ronald Wood vt ill l-e assistaiil to K. H Kkman at the Kkin.tn Funeral home Mr. and Mis Elder Prteismi have solfl their residence at 2. Chinch t.. and have moved to 508 Oak t. Peterson's ate pro prietors of the Peteison Market here and are onstrm ting a new store building at Pwik rx1 rust s t r eels. Virtona Rixer l.vn, callle station in Auli xlia's Noitt.ein Teritoiy. coveis fl.fiHfl.VI2 m ir. more land than Vrinw.nl The imKM M) always full at tht time of ita e lile. 21 TRIPS DAILY SALEM f SAI1 FRAIICISCO ! ONI WAT. . $US rm4 1 rw-.. r9 1 1 I Depots Now SoWoto Hotel Phooo Salem S6S4 Four Corners Rickey Garden club meets with Mrs. Harvey Meyers, East State street, Wed nesday night. Mrs. Waldo Miller will assist. Plans for the year will be discussed. Members and friends are invited to attend. Silverton F. IT. Church, who has served as manager for the Silverton Service Lumber com pany since its opening a year ago. has been transferred to Portland as of September 1. Virgil Huddle- ston, who has also been associated with the company since its open ing, will succeed Church as man ager. Fnnr fnrnfn Mr anH ti get aiong. in me opinion 01 rai-iVick Withrow and children Al ton. It isn t necessary, he said. fre1 B;trbaia 8nd idie are on for everyone to become com- ! ,rir. n,.r, - munists in order to find out a way to live at peace in the same world with communists. He pro tested letting some other country set the American standards for getting along "with other nations. We Americans, he said, should 1 LiJo o"J o I , Quality or product MaB& z . "f:c I CONTINUING SUCCHSS f4 I , . (M 1 ' -w' I A ? . - -. -4ir mm ' I Wt (aeTsnac by U McCornuck bwW mpom tae arkpaai cd paiaUac ! I t , i rA TV T-A T in, I to visit relatives. Withrow until recently was operator of the local service station. Mission Bottom Spending the weekend in Mt. Hood and Mt. Jefferson areas were Dr. and Mrs. I Charles L. Sherman. Dona Hen- den-on, Calvin Massee. and Mrs. Frank A. Massee. They went i from Mt. Hood across to Brciten I bush springs by way of Skyline trail, and hiked from there to Jefferson park and Russell lake at the base of Mt. Jefferson. GrrvaK The Farmers Union will meet Wednesday night at the grade school building. "What I expect of My Farmers Union' will be the topic discussed by the young people of the organization. Iebanon - I-onnie Douglas. 5. was struck in the stomach bv a horse stomping at flies as the child played near by. Two p r forations were found in the small intestine but it is belived the child will recover. Four Corner The Lee brothers have the foundation for their Quonset hut which will house their furniture repair and uphol stering business ready. It is a new enterprise recently started here. Oervais High school district. No. 1 is advertising for bids for sale of bonds in the sum of $45. 000 to finance an addition tn the Smith-Hughes department of the school. Bids will be opened Sep tember 3. Four Corners The Community church of which the Rev. Flank Ferrin is pastor, held a congrega- ....... ......................... afitrt5 mo invt i So smoke fhat smoke of Fine Tobacco - New strikes ky CIO wiB ! finti 9i l-waf 'ant's, said Tht Wall Street Jonraal Some CIO leaders want to hold off until after elections . . . but rising living costs make local bosses Impatient, The Wail Street Journal revealed June 21st. In a brief news Item, The Wall Street Journal told of two big strikes that could come before fall . . . stated major demands for which CIO will Intensify its fight. This la how The Journal dls out and dally report significant business news. A different kind of newspaper . . . the Important facts and what they mean . . . for the man who has no time to waste. Not only concise, but complete . . . product of largest news at&ll of any business paper, supple mented by services of not just one but all four big press associa tions. Saves you consulting a dozen different sources. 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