1 The Stoltman. Sdtm, Or.. WodnoadaY, Sept. 18. 1948 Willamette Laic School Dean Prepared to Greet Full Classes By Isabel Child RowbriBth City Editor. Th Statesman House-hunting successfully completed, housecleaning in the law school (erstwhile navy) building "well under way. Col. Seward P. Rme, new dean of Willamette university's college of law, is prepar ing to meet at a September 27 convocation the biggest study body in the college's history. A freshman cUs of 75-00; second-year class of 16; and eight in the third-year ciash will com prie thtil group. To the four full time faculty members Reese ex pects to add a full-time librarian, he akf Tuesday. Only major change in the law school build ing urn, it returns from wartime to peacetime use Is enlargement of tie library under supervision of Dr. Roy S. Lockeoour. Reene, who taught at Syracuse university before entering the service, spoke of the building which houses law oh the Willam ette campus as auperior to many in larger institutions of the na tion. A former Salem postoffice, the structure is well, if not per fectly, adapted to its use as a college building, he said. Staying at Sorority Among other Willamette build ings the new law dean has been privileged to inspect is one so rority house (Chi Omega), where. with Mrs.; Reese and their daugh ter and son, he has been living while seekinc the Drivate real dence (1810 S. Church it.) Into XTE URGE YOU TO SEE AIID COIIPADE Jewelry work done in our own shop you will find is modern, distinctive, high quality by expert craftsmen and faultless workmanship. Your diamonds will be safe guarded since they never leave our premises. 4 Veterans New t Emplared I (ZiHr Uberal allow- J I if 1 Diamen4 Setting by Am Expert Haasxwii? JEWELRY-MAN L'FACTURERS FOB SAIL IS HIGH PRESSURE BOILER 125 Horsepower Horizontal tubular code constructed for 150 pounds pres sure. This boiler Is in excellent condition and ISO pounds will be allowed when properly Installed. Written bids will be received through September 28, 1848. All bids should be sent to (he Oregon State School for the Deaf, 999 Locust St, Salem, Oregon. wucn tne' tamiiy plans to move shortly. The daughter, Dpnetta, will ; be a sophomore in the wil lamette j music school; the son. Didc is tnf the fourth grade. Font Degrees Reese brings to! his1 new post four- degrees, twof in law from Indiana; and Duke universities, experience as a professor of law, in the army air forces, and in the office of the chief attorney of the veterans' administration. The i other new faculty, member is Kenneth York, who hails from Colorado and served in the ma rine corps i during the war.i Salvation Army A f T Le. Aids Destitute There may be plenty of jobs, but no way has yet been found to do . away with 1 the kinds of emergency in which the Salvation Army often assists the advisory board of the Army agreed at Its meeting last weekend. Examples: A transient worker on his way home was tn an automobile; aoci dentj was j taken te the . hospital minus shoes, apparently lost at the scene. I The Salvation Army provided the shoes so that he could, be discharged from the hos pital j upon j his recovery. v j A girl defense worker en f route home was iremoveda from a train nere ; Decause or serious sadden illness. The hotel bill and 'other expenses ate up her last dollar; she lost the use of the remainder of her ticket. Army officers said, and a physician said her heart condition would keep her I from working" for a long time. A? tele gram to her father brought no money, but an appeal to the Sal vation Army did, and she was transported! to the home of a sis ter. : - . i : I. An agency of the Community Chest, the Army works in close conjunction; with both county wel fare and Red Cross offices, repre sentatives of its advisory board declare. Late Upswing Saves Grains CHICAGO, Sept. 17.-W)-G rain futures were nervous the ' greater part of today s trade, but toward the close started an upswing that carried all deliveries, except March oats, above j yesterday's Close.,; ; 'Trade- in wheat was light and the thin market responded to of ferings. Announcement by ' the commodity credit corporation that the government had purchased an additional 3,070,000 bushels here, bringing the cumulative total to 13.640,011 bushels, had a stimu lating effect. At the .close wheat was Vt to I IV4 nigner than tne previous fin ish, January $1JI7V. Corn was V to Vs higher. January $1.33. Oats were hk to .4 higher,, Sep tember 79 u. and barley was V to 2 cents higher, November $1.42 Reports from Washington indi cated the European wheat crop may have been underestimated and that exports from this coun try may fall below the goal set by the government. Voters' Pamphlets Ready for Mailing Mailing of the voters' pamph lets, for the November election. will get under way early next week, David O'Hara, in charge of the state elections bureau, an nounced Tuesday. He said approx imately 600,000 of these pamphlets WOU14 be required to supply all registered voters in the state. O'Hara predicted a vote in No verr--r as large as that two years, ago fspite the closing of a num-i ber of shipyards and other war industries. Creamery Men to Switch Numbers ! i f In a move to eliminate all; dead timber in the official numbers al located to creamery operators and distributors in Oregon, the state agricultural aepartmerit Is cancelling all present creamery and distributor numbers and will allocate new ones, i Officials said this is the! first step in a program to return the state ; to fully legal requirements on consumer grades on butter. Under the Oregon law, all butter wrappers must bear a label show ing the creamery or distributor number, the consumer grade em blem, the net weight and name and address of the j manufacturer or distributor. Kimmel Suggests Legion Executive j Hiring of S full-time executive secretary for Capital Post No. 9 American Legion, today was on the list of innovations suggested by : Rex KimmeL newly-installed commander of the post. Limitation of post membership to .1031 persons, a life member ship! plan with fees to be placed in a! trust fund and an increase in membership fees from $4 to $5 annually also were recommended! by 1 the new commander. "2 i intend to activate the mem bership of this post," Kimmel said, continuing that he hoped to mini mize the number of members who do not contribute materially to the well-being of the i post "The American Legion must be a liv ing exsmple of man's responsibil ity to man," he aaid. Legionnaires Plan Auxiliary Immediate formation of a wom en's auxiliary for World WarII post No. 136, American Legion, was authorized at last night's meeting when a motion passed to amend the post constitution, mak ing organization possible. The employment committee giv en authority to check into the op portunities of employment for vet erans in the state penitentiary who are now eligible for parole; It was reported that there are now vet erans eligible for parole, except thai they cannot fulfill the re quirement of already having a steady Job on the outside. Congressman Walter Norblad told the group that the seven rep resentatives who are veterans have great difficulty getting on com mittees which deal with veteran affairs, but that the veteran will be represented well when con gress reconvenes. A sample $4.66 sleeping bag for sale to veterans by war assets ad ministration was exhibited. 1 PHONE 2487 MATINEE DAILY FROM 1 P. M. T0I20DR0U! End Todoyl (WeL) Alan Ladd TO. M&L" Anita Louise "PERSONALITY DDT Jaycees Croups to Visit City for Talk ' j ' ! Junior Chamber of Commerce delegations from all over the val ley will father st Salem October 1 to i hear Selden F. Waldo, na tional president of Jaycees speak to the Salem chapter, Irwin. We del, president of the local group said at their regular noon meeting Tuesday. ; The Javceea will take over tH senior chamber or commerce ban quet room for the occasion. As a feature or the Tuesdav meeting Gordon Tesch,! represent ina Calvert Distilleries. . hv an uiuatratea taiic on the distilling ana proper use or whiskey. Too Late to Classify WANTED: Work with 1-ton OUC truck with rtv. Phone j 71M. DAY to Join Vets Council Salem Disabled American vet erans post No. 6 authorized af filiation with the Marion county federated Veterans council at last night's meeting, at the women's clubhouse. . Initiation of 15 new members was conducted by Dr. Roy Rey nelds and orders for sleeping bags, a sample of which was on display, were taken by Comman der Charles Peterson. Verne L.' Ostrander, A. L. Brew ster and George Sandy were ap pointed to a membership commit tee after they had given reports on the recent DAV national con vention. Special awards were won by Beverly Jlinehart and Wil liams Richards. TKEATEB FOR BURNS Mrs. Virgil Pade, route 7, Sa lem, was treated by police first aid men at about 10:25 a.m. yes terday for second degree burns on her left hand and abdomen. Today and Thursday I CO-HIT! . READ N BUTTER TAKEN A loaf of bread, a pound of butter and a red plaid auto robe were taken from his car while parked in front of the armory last night between 8 and 10 o'cloc k Tuesday, Ralph Sohn, 1132 Ruge st., West Salem, reported to police last night. NO HORSE MEAT SHORTAGE NEWARK, N. J., Sept.' 17 Horse meat dealers here report business increases ranging, from 50 to 75 per eentj thanks, they say, to the current meat shortage. Sparkling Floor) Show RUSTY COLMAN Dinners Served from 6 p.m. Chli Feed Oar Specialty Starts Meitday. Sept. ZS , "LAUGHS INC." Direct from Tna Brenaa man's Helly weed Restaaraal ftfft . sv a -TOinGUTi V 1 ! .-" A Musical Fantasy with tk voices f DINAH SHORE AW IBJSflt THE ANOREWS SISTCtS NELSON I00T JERRY C010NNA REN BARM CN0I8S TNE KING'S MEN o ! mvit ml STERUNC NOUOWAT IENNT C000MAN 1 r . t3 WALT DISNEY'S . ' a jt 0 m m s 1 Co-Feature! Can the Lie-Detector Make Criminals TalkT THE TRUTH ABOUT MURDER" EXTRA! MARCH OF TIME. "WANTED, MORE HOMES' L7Q 0.7E... Aa3 L7Q OIL!! Out d the rich, eveatful ee who f f eeriest m bottle o mol hMtory.. comes a new ond esciting odventvre pocked ' wMi rgmonce ond Sjoiery. r j r- , J 1 siiMijiiiirs 1 , 1 1 1 CO-HIT! HEADLINE MYSTERY! STEPHANIE BACHELOR MICHAEL BROWNE "C mi IE OF THE CEIITURY" LATEST IIEWSI Bynas Spooks of Stutfcjgrtl Jews Batllo Cyprus Edlctl Seaport Strike! Lots Sports! "Bad BUI Bunion' Bellons Hearing Ccnler Special Clinic Than., FrL & Sal. ! Sept. 19, 20 & 21 Jay R. Nedry, Cenaeltant Demonstrating the imnlni new; hearing aid developed by Beltone. Hardly larger than a deck of cards! Full level tones and increased power for better bearing under all conditions. No cumbersome battery pack. Scientific personal fitUng serv ice, i i At Oar New Location , Boon 218, Oregon Bldg. State High Sta Salem. Oreg. rhene Z-4491 I " I I - ! ' ' -- V .'I 1 , 1 I ' i J&itJ r " 'j "m ' ' OPEN8 :4i T. M. . NOW! SHE'S DYNAMITE! ; 1 ntntinr I I. wNaaJi;.r I 1 : III I O THRILL CO-HIT! O ! Rosemary LaPlanehe "STRANGLER OF THE ,' I SWAMP- I" On Public Display Wednesday, Sept. 18 al Cily Center (Hear Grand Thealre) OPENS :4S P. M. Now! Jeanne -Croln 1 ; Lon McCalUstor 5 co-nrn bill bo yd MANHUNT HIKE'S THI riNIST most luxurious highway transportation ever offered Greyhound travelers in Oregon! These new, sleek, smooth-riding beau ties sre in production Mf0w...snd will be placed Starts Today! Opens "ALONG THE NAVAJO TRAIL" CO-FEATURE Jack Oakle "On Stage Everybody" JVas"BksajajBsa 77. rfH-r"'k:T In service on Oregon's highways just as fast as they are delivered to Greyhound. COMI DOWN and see for yourself the many strik Ing new features, all designed for your extra travel comfort,, convenience, safety... big, deep cushioned four-position seats... built-in rest room . . . dust-proof luggage compartments . . . smartly appointed interiors, .. "Scotchlite" exterior re flector psint for added safety, i AND HtMtMBtn, when you're looking over this great new luxury-liner, that it's not designed for 1950 or 1955 service ... it's actually in production mow... whole new fleet for immediate service. Just ss fast ss they roll off the production line. C. T. Reaney, Agent 228 N. High Ph. 5051 (?rmj3 B7C3QDG9