The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 15, 1948, Page 2, Image 2

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    j Yho Statesman! 'Salem. Oregon. Thursday. July 15. 1948
fC4ptive9 Mines
Resume Work
Salem Grocer to Start Work
On $23,000 Store Building
Mason Oiarlle. Salem tfrocer. received a permit from the
city engineer's 'office, Wednesday to buil a $23,410 store-apartment
'.building at 1835 Mission st. f
ChapeBe 1j jw operating a market at 1850 Lee st, behind the
aite of bis new store on the opposite side of the block. He will
. manage both businesses when the Minion street store la
. pleted.
Day labor Will be used In con
struction of the building and work
will start today- The structure
will be of pumice blocks, finished
in stucco and 40 by 80 feet. An
apartment win be located la the
rear of the store.
Another sizeable permit issued
Wednesday went to H. H. Harris,
of Salem, to buQd six houses In
the 300 block Of south 25th street
at a cost of $14,700. Each oL the
units wiQ cost $2,450 and will be
located at 307, 309, 311, 313, 315
and 317 S. 25th st,
Barham Bros., Salem contract
ors, were authorised to start con
struction on a $13,300 office
building at 525 N. Church st., but
- It was not disclosed who will oc
cupy the building.
Other- permits went to Al
Frankum 8c Son to build a house
and garage at 1210 N. 24th st,
$8,000, and to H. E. BosweU to
reroof a , bouse at 1795 S. High
St.. $250.
-PITTSBURGH, July 14 -VD-
Coal flowed again from steel com
pany-owned mines today as the
government withdrew its injunc
tion suit against the United Mine
Workers in the captive contract
case at Washington.
Captive miners, who began
work stoppage July for lack of a
contract, resumed work upon the
strength of yesterday's contract
signing, obtained through the in
stance of Federal Judge T. Alan
Goldsborough,
In the capital, the judge today
permitted the national labor rela
tions board to drop its injunction'
proceedings In view Aft the new
contract.
Truman Nomination, Special
Session Call Climax Conclave
CONVENTION HALL. Philadelphia! July 15 (Thursday) -AV
The democratic national convention ended early this morning after
a hectic 3-day stand which saw President Truman emerge as the
No. 1 party candidate; watched a walk-out staged by the Alabama
and Mississippi delegations; Saw Sea. Albin Berkley of Ken
tucky win the vice presidential nomination; and heard Mr, Truman
lay down a challenge to the re f"
stand on the issue of civil rights.
"We call upon the congress to
support our president in guaran
teeing these basic and fundamen
tal 'American principles the
right; of full and equal political
participation; the right to equal
opportunity of employment; the
right of security of person, and the
right of equal treatment in the
service and defense of our nation."
publican party by calling a special
session of congress to start July
26.
Mr. Truman was nominated - on
the first ballot late last night.
As the bolters walked out into
the rain, they left the party bad
ly and perhaps irreparably split.
Some delegates said the demo
cratic discord might even guar
antee a republican victory in
November.
Stalked from HaU
Governor Fielding Weight of
Mississippi stalked from conven
tion hall to call a meeting of
southern rebels Saturday in Bir
mingham. Ala. The purpose:
To pick a "states rights" can
didate to run against both Presi
dent Truman and republican
Thomas E. Dewey.
Alabama's unhappy democrats
already had arranged a Birming
ham meeting and said they would
be. glad to welcome converts.
Gov. Phil Donnelly of Missouri
put Mr. Truman's name In nomi
nation as "the man of the people."
And for. his running mate, the
choice was Senator Alben Bark
ley from border-state Kentucky.
Donnelly praised his fellow Mis
sourian as "soldier, patriot, and
statesman." a maii "whose splen
did courage never faltered, in war
or in peace, and who Is today lead
ing this nation to a: new and great
er destiny
Truman Bedlam
And tnen the Truman version
Popaloes North Wins
The big delegations from the
populous north put it over. Wis
consin clinched it with 24 votes
that moved the total to 823 On
ly 618 were needed.
The final count was 65m to
582.
That was fairly close. But it was
a lopsided 925 to 309 against a
southern bid to squeeze into the
platform a declaration that the
states "haye the right to control
theif internal affairs and enforce
Police regulations" within the lim
itations Imposed by the 14th and
15th amendments to the constitution."
McKennon to Attend
Nurserymen Meeting
....... , ,j, . i
Hot Day for a Hog Bonfire
. , , " ! ( . j j 5 1 ;..'--- . '
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Bonneville Opens Bids f
For Salem-Albany Line
PORTLAND, July 14-VBon-neville
power administration1 win
open bids July 27 on construction
of a . 115-kilovolt i transmission
line from the Salem sub-station
to Albany.
The project will provide two
transmits ion lines to Albany, and
eventually improve : power serv
ice to Eugene and: the Oregon
coast. i -
e, -4M, '--V,
It Is bet weather for bonfires, bet that is the way the huge pue
ef logs at the West Salem Lnmber Ce, located on the Wallace
road, looked Tuesday when sparks set It afire. Shown above are
min workers sad aaembers of the Salem tire department sweating
to pet eat tbe blase in the valuaMe tiaabers. (Photo by Don Dill,
Statesman staff photographer.)
Hop Festival
Set Sept. 1 to 4
INDEPENDENCE, July 14
-(Special)- The annual Indepen
dence Hop festival will be held
this year from September 1 to 4
inclusive, it was decided at a
meeting of the Hop Festival asso
ciation tonight. .
Gene Malecki, Salem, was nam
ed manager of the festival and is
to assume duties on August 2 af
ter completion of the Bean festi
val at Stayton, which he is also
managing this year.
Malecki announced- that all re
ceipts from the festival would be
used by the Independence ath
letic fund.
Members of the association pres
ent at the meeting Included George
Corwin, chairman; Cecil Lamb,
president and ticket chairman; Dee
Taylor, dance chairman; Robert
Craven, parade chairman; Elmer
Oplinger, secretary and Ralph
Kletzing.
Marine Reserves
Prepare Materiel
For Active Duty
Salem s marine corps reserve
unit met Wednesday night it the
airport armory for its regular drill
session and to prepare equipment
for active training duty in August.
Mai. Leonard Hicks, battalion
commandant, conducted officers
school. Other training Included
close order drill, communications,
gun drill and recruit drill. '
frank McKennon. chief of th
plant Industry division of the
; state; agricultural department,
will leave here Monday for Mil
waukee, Wis., where he will
. i , ,
of bedlam broke out in this vast, j lf . . Y,
super-hot hall. It was beils, horns, i Lf110-1", , A-"oc"tI?
whistles, a siren or two. band nd
organ. Just 'plain whooping ana v"
There bad beer, on for Russell, ' i&Kennon later
too. Twentv minutes of it The i -nicago to attend a
m I AL. A .
folks from Dixie struggled through
the aisles, with Truman ites using
huge pictures of their man as bar
ricades. The inil'f- vas enraged from bad
beating it took from the north in
a furious civil rights fight, a fight
over such things as lynching, poll
taxes and racial discrimination in
jobs, which the south says are
purely state problems,
racked Up. Left
In protest, all of Mississippi's 22
delegates, and 13 of Alabama's 25
pecked tip and left. ;
Before the take-e-walk crowd f
pushed its way through the packed t
middle aisle, a Wisconsin dele-
gate yelled:
"Good riddance! We'll win in ;
November without you." ;
"The heir you will," Alabama i
Chairman Handy EHis yelled beck, i
"Harry Truman won't get $5,501
from the white people in Georgia
to help bis campaign."
Twice the north beat beck at
tempts from the south to make the
platform say, in effect, that racial
and similar problems are for the
states to handle and for the fed
eral government to keep hands
off. ,
Hseimered mte Platform
And then the voting power of
the north hammered into the plat
form 'a declaration that:
"We highly commend President
Harry Truman for his courageous
will go to
meeting of
the .national plant board as one
of two representatives from the
western plant board.
I Bowlers Attention
This Is the ttaae to practice.
Plenty ef put setters,
Capitol BowHag AHoy
4CI Ferry 81 rfcesw 3fTl
CEMETERY FUND PASSED
WASHINGTON, July 14-(JP)-Senator
Morse (R-Ore.) notified
Oregon war veterans today the
army department has tentatively
decided to include funds for a na
tional cemetery at Portland in
budget estimates In January.
TONITE ic
Brent Deitriek
and the Esquires
Italia as
American pinners -
Club Comlo
3959 Portland .1
7 P. aa. to 2:3 a. am.
Al A . Il l
11 reWra la rertlsatf tm III
f DANCING '
DINTNO 1-4
I FLOOR SHOWS jS
f at the Northwest's H
Finest Nleht Snot It I
tZ9 S.W. Salmea SUAt. SM
rr
hi
i
SpociaI Smnmer Raioe
0 hrs. only $5
Loam All ol the Popular
Fox Trot Walts
Swing - Rumba
SandjjaJTaBoo
Now Claw Start
Thisr Week
WMnU New
124
Oregon
Institute of Dancing
155 S. Liberty St.
Approves! for Teterane
X.
Approves!
Training
BASEBALL
TOiHGIIT.
8:15 P. L .
Waters Field r
Salen Sczalsrs :
Yalrina
Box Seat Reservations
Phone 4647
Venetian Blinds
Made in . Salem
? s
Modernize TOUR homo effective!
... simply . . . b j fitting your windows
with Salem Venetian Blinds now.
No matter what the style of your homA
Venetian Blinds lend an appearance of
tmiformity and finish to its windows,
RfinHotDT flfio ifiiiis
MANUFACTURERS
IJnemployment
CompensatioiTS
lipped by Flood
Flood area displacements result
ed In a considerably increased lo
cal: office unemployment compen
sation claims load during June,
buf payments were lower than the
previous month and but little
changed from a year ago, the state
unemployment compensation com
mission reported here Wednesday.
Benefits rose temporarily in
some Columbia river areas, but the
only offices reporting higher dis
bursements than ln May were
Portland and Dallas. The $454,873
paid to those covered by state law
was 14 per cent under the previous
month but was slightly higher than
in June, 1947, when a lower" bene
fit schedule was in effect.
Although the number of claims
for the new benefit year-was lower
than for the same period a year
agp, new claims for the 1947-48
benefit year filed by those from
flooded - out plants brought about
an increase in state claims from
June. 1947.
Seasonal operations wree expec
ted to reduce the claims load dur
ing the remainder of the current
year.
Polio Affects
Older Groups
NEW YORK, July 14 -AV A
change in infantile paralysis, which
t ; Mm gjvuis um iiiww Mwm.mw wwu
j to adult Americans and less often
J.to small children, was reported
! mo we openms; mvn at uie ui
International Polio conference
here.
About 1,000 delegates registered,
including 50 from foreign coun
tries. The switch in polio was re
ported by Dr. Albert B. Sabin, of
the- College of Medicine, and
Children's Hospital Research
foundation. University of Cincin
nati. -?j '
The increasing susceptibility of
adult Americans is mostly con
fined to the northern United
States. It includes teen-agers,
while under five-year-olds are es
caping. Even in China and Korea
where infantile paralysis is rare,;
the disease has been occurring with
unexpected frequency among
adult Americans.
Vanpo
Group
rt
Demand to Go
Unanswered
Gov. John H. Hall won't have
any answer to demands made last
week by a group of Vanport resi
dents, who claimed to represent
flood victims, who came to Salem
and picketed the capitoL
The governor again charged the
group was led by communists. He
refused to confer with the delega
tion of about 100 persona,
There aint gonna be any an
swer" to demands that the state
provide jobs, housing, cash bonus
es, and work for a Columbia val
ley authority. Governor Hall said
Wednesday.
Governor Hall said he had re
ceived a number of letters criti
cizing his action in not conferring
with the: group but that he was
"hot concerned.
"Neither win I dignify those let
ten with an answer," Governor
Hall declared.
Governor Hall aaid most of these
letters came from members of the
caravan group.
A
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Shirley Temple If I
Guy Madison jj I
"HONEYMOON" If I
Kirby Grant Mjl
"SONG OF IDAHO" I
Color Cartoon
Lais News
Slat DaDy From 1 p. m.
NOW OITEJIING
CZVf 2C0 LAUSHS TO A
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-JANET BLAIR
Co-Hit! EasseU Haydea
"WHESJE NOBTH BEqiNS"
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SOW. OPENS :45 P. af.
Co-Hit! Was, Boyd
BILLS OF OLD WYOMING
ljvuig noon
Velours - Mohairs frloses
Values to S24M30. Beducod
Several Monodxs. Velours & Taps
Values to 1239-50. Special
A Dandy Valour Soils Special
169M
DEOP LEAF EXT. TABLES
42xt7" eatseefsa Msbsgaay Tea
14x71" extenstap Mahogany Y
7 tie. extenslesi Wslnt nuts Gateser
4 Styles Period Chairs $1SJS
58"
$78M
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Sold Glasses ' wHs'-' ' ::
J, Ash Tray; ,
DUXAB2LT I
Carpet Sweeper
Flallem lleclxcrs
49M
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Specially lrleos al
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mm mm up mi
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Salem Doctor s
Estate Valued
At$100e000
s I ' . , .
- The estate of Dr. Gussle A
Niles, 92, Salem doctor who died
July 9 at a local hospital, was ad
mitted to probate In Marlon coun
ty circuit court Wednesday. ;
Ronald C. Glover, Salem attor
ney, was appointed executor of
the estate valued at approximately
990,000 In personal property and
910,000 in real property r
Sole heir at law la Ida L. Nlles,
98, of 499 N. Winter st, mother
of the deceased. Dr. NIlea had been
a practicing physician and surgeon
In Salem for about the past 10
years. She died ef a heart attack,
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S60 South 21st Street
Phone 3148