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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1948)
it 'til 1 1 1 4? j Th Sttrtnicm. Salnii -broi; Sahudcrf hJT' 31. -1948 Sliriners Set Annual Picnic At Silverton Salem Shrine dub's annual pic nic will be at Silverton city park Wednesday evening. President T. H. Tomiinson announced Friday. The" outing, for members' fam ilies and visiting Shriners, will feature a barbecue supper fur inshed by the club. The program, to begin iiTthe late afternoon, will Include a ball game, swimming and stunts. Special music is slat-, ed. Among visitors expected are Frank McGuire, potentate, and Luther Duckworth, recorder, of Al Kader -temple in Portland, and other members of the Al Kader board, and Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry, potentate of Hilla tem ple in Ashland. In charge of arrangements are Robert B. Sears, chairman, Dick Meyers, I- V. Benson, R. W. Beut ler, J. C. Byrd, Frank Chatas, Hugh Adams. Barney Van Onsen cord, Joe Hutchinson and B. E. (Kelly) Owens, all of Salem, and Jack Fisher and Erroll Ross of Silverton. Entire Technical Laboratory Given To Dallas Hospital DAT J. AS, July The Wil lamette Valley Lumber company has given the Dallas hospital a complete technical laboratory. The laboratory will be available to all patients, said J. A. .Moore, manager, including company em ployes. A microscope, electric cardio graph, centrifuge, electric oven, water distiller, basal metabolism machine and a number of other devices are included. Mill employes will help to Duild a file of blood types for emer gency transfusions. Noted Woman Educator, Social Worker Passes CHICAGO, July 30 -iJP)- Miss Sophonisba P. Breckinridge, 82, a Eioneer social worker, educator, iwyer and author, died todav of a heart attack after illness. a five-month Tonight One Night Only Ilonle Bine and His Orchestra O DINING o Club Combo 3059 Portland Road O DANCING O Old Time DAIICE Every Salnrday Ilighl ZS9 Court Street Over Western Ante Mnsie By MATTHES OLD TIME ORCHESTRA Admission 6c Tax Inc. Beautiful Glenwood Ballroom 4 mi. N. Salem on 99E Glenn Woodry's Orchestra 13 Peoples 13 "Lei's Go" 1.00 Inc. Tax 7 Old Time in. 0 Wajnt Straehan and His Orchestra Each Saturday Night VJT.U.HaU -- Hood and Church-SU. Feds Better Now NORTH ST. PAUL, July SI Nine month eld Thomas Kaehn, Jr.. of North St Paul was a happy bey ea his arrival heme from University hospital despite his bandared midriff, the result of a four-hour operation to remove an open safety pin In his stomach. He swallowed the pin while his mother was changing his diaper. Hereafter the diapers will be pinless, the mother said. CP) Wlrephoto to The Statesman) Ava AL Ashcraft, Salem Resident, Dies at Hospital Ava Marie Ashcraft, 61, resident of 844 Mill st late died Thursday night at a local hospital. She had undergone major surgery e a flier in the- weex. Irs. Ashcraft was born Febru ary 18, 1887 in Sheridan, Arkan- s. She was married to Reuben I. Ashcraft, who survives her, in Arkansas in 1908 Together the ! couple came to Wallowa in eastern i Fair horse show in Salem, Sept. Oregon in 1924 and in 1929 moved ' 6 to 12. Edwards has been judge to Salem. Both had lived here of the fair horse show since 1946. since. Roy H. Simmons, manager of the She was a lifetime member of 1 horse show, said Friday that pre the Baptist church. mium lists covering all divisions Surviving besides the husband of comoetition will be nut in the j are six children, Mrs. Hercial Jones j of Wallow; Mrsj Warner Jackson, Richland, Wash.; and Mrs. W. E. Hogland, Theron, O. Ashcraft, Salem's Biggest Show Bargain! NEW TODAY! 2 Major Hits On 1 Hare Program: IT'S tOVE. K , . . . 1 VanJOHIlSOIl JuneAUYSOIl M BUTCH JENIINS tnd Major Stadle Hit! WALLVS DRESSED TO WMUM H- Til itins A e w Ooradqr PATIICI Kcwb Mi 1 f r;nr - i i Warlyn Ashcraft and Carol Ash craft, all of Salem, and 10 grand children. Funeral services will be held Monday, August 2, at 10:30 a Jn. at the W. T. Rigdon chapel with the Ret. W. S. Fredericks offi ciating. Interment will be in Bel crest Memorial park. Presiding Judge for Horse Show Named George Edwards of Palo Alto, Calif was announced Friday as nresidine judge at the Oregon State mails net week. Entries in the horse show close August 27. SUSJIENDERS AFTER AffOL Arthur William Sheehan, chief warrant officer, U. S. Navy, sur rendered at city police headquart ers Friday after nearly a year's absence without leave, city police reports said. Police said that Sheehan admitted he had traveled all over the U. S. since leaving Vint Hill Farms, Va., August 28, 1947. Local naval authorities were to take Sheehan Into custody to day, police said. , Last Day Judy Garland Gene Kelly In IIET7 Toiionnoui YOU WILL REMEMBER ALL THE LOVE... ttoiiitte9to YOU WILL REMEMBER ALL THE IMPACT... 0tee9 7 YOU WILL REMEMBER ALL THE ANGRY PASSION... OfllU!ilJll.ilillllKs mm CK' m& m?vs ' Extra "Moslem! Moments' Warner News oeetoe)ftf- rermit ijrantea For Building of Phone Offices Robert Somerville, Portland, was issued a building permit Friday by the city engineer's of fice for construction of the office building for Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company-- at the northwest corner of Court and Winter streets. The estimated cost of the building, as indicated in the permit, is $60,700. Carl M. Halvorson. Inc. will be general contractor for the building which Somerville is con structing for the telephone com pany tinder a 10-year lease agreement. The street number for the new building will be 765 Court street. Other building permits Friday went to B. T. KumJer at 891 N. 'Cottage st., $50; George Edwards, reroof porch, 2445 Hazel ave $50; Mrs. Lenora Tracy, erect a house. 652 Locust st, $1,750; Mrs. lone Hepp. erect house, 144 W. Miller st.. $,5O0; George Wyant, garage, 646 Breys ave $850; Kenneth Coates. erect house. 1585 Market st.. $3,400. and to W. E. Hansen, reroof house, 820 Church St., $250. N. Aldrich Trial Appeal Granted Change of trial to Clackamas county circuit court was granted Friday to Frederick C. Aldrich, Portland, who has appealed his conviction, in Marion county dis trict court' on a charge of driving while intoxicated. The change was ordered by Cir cuit Judge E. M. Page, who or dinarily would have heard the case in circuit court here. However, Judge Page had already conducted the trial in district court, after he was called in due to the disquali fication of Judge Joseph B. Fel ton. Felton was called as a witness by the state. Aldrich was sentenced June 19 to a $250 fine and one month in Jail. Salem Woman Hurt in Crash Mrs. Mabel Scott, 130 N. 23rd sL, was resting comfortably in Sa lem Memorial hospital early this morning, attendants said, following a pickup and truck accident Fri day afternoon at Greenwood cor ners, on the Dallas highway, V miles west of Oak 'Knoll golf course. She suffered abrasions, bad scratches and shock, according to first aid men who took her to the hospital. State police reported that the accident occurred when a pickup truck driven by Mrs. Scott's hus band, Eldon Scott, and a truck driven by Earl Hampton, 3670 H State st., sldeswiped. The pickup turned over, police said, but little damage and no other injuries were suffered. "The Pirale" Color by Technicolor e 1IADY CHRISTIANS QOWARD DUFF LOUISA HORTON FRANK COXROY ARLEXE FRANCIS LLOYD COUGH (TESIIS ESEM moss Plus This Gay Hit! JEAN PORTER An sty LLOYD Jgne ftnSSH Tony Pastor m Ms i i - i i it lilt" , Z 11 ' Atomic Fight Versus Cancer Gains Grounds By neward Vf. Blakealee Associated Ptcm Science Editor BROOKHAVEN, N. Y July 30 (JP) A new step in the atomic energy attack ot. cancer was made public today at. the Brook haven national laboratory of the atomic energy commission. A new point during growth has been discovered where gam ma rays and x-rays kill tissue cells. The discovery may answer a puzzle for doctors, who have cured many cancers with these rays, but failed with many more, because for some mysterious rea son many cancers resist the rays. The Brook haven work was aid ed by funds from the American Cancer society and the Dormer foundation, Philadelphia. The work is by Dr. Arnold H. Spar row and associates, in the Brook haven biological laboratory, di rected by Dr. F. H. Nims. It was known that in cancer the atomic rays destroy tissue cells during the period when sin gle cells are dividing to form two cells each. This division is how cancers grow. It Is also how healthy cells grow, In men, ani mals and plants. Farben Blast Toll Mounts LUDWIGSHAFEN, G e r many, July 30 -(JPy- French authorities tonight officially estimated Wed nesday's explosion and fire at the huge I. G. Farben plant caused $15,000,000 damage. The toll of known dead in the disaster rose to 155. Another 150 to 200 persons were reported miss ing and possibly dead. Nearly 400 still were in hospitals and another 2,100 were treated for injuries. German plant officials said American soldiers . who rushed across the Rhine bridge from the American zone city of Mannheim "saved 1,000 lives" by their prompt action. Benefit Pilgrimage To Mary's Peak Slated by Shriners Hundreds of Willamette valley residents are expected to join in a pilgrimage to 4100-foot Mary's peak, 25 miles west of Corvallis, when the Shrine clubs of four Oregon counties stage their an nual trek Sunday for the bene fit of crippled children. The trek "will provide a day of entertainment in the natural ampitheater atop the mountain. Monte Blue, veteran movie star, will emcee the program, which will include two air shows, four bands and a drum and bugle corps, a stage show, and van Ore gon centennial address byxErnest Haycox, noted Portland author. Prevne Toniiel (One Feature) Tae tlreel es sVfcfx flrffllvj' BsWW' AstwhsT JLSsWlha.s ! - . Co-Fcilsre! Lacjh JigainI Lovo i H jain! n Stocks Regain Early Loss in Brisk Trading By William D. Ilargan NEW YORK, July 30 HfPh- The stock market came back fighting late today after a bad early maul ing. Closing prices were down frac tions to around 2 points, and in a few cases more, but as trading came to a siop at 3 the market wa still on the way up. Turnover of 1,3 10,000 shares was the largest in 10 days and com pared with only 750,000 Thursday. Lower by around a point or more were General Motor at 62, Goodrich Tire 56, Sears Roebuck 36 V4, Lockheed 21. Electric Power & Light 21, Phelps Dodge 54, General Electric 38 Yt, Johns-Man-ville 35, Santa Fe 113, Great Northern preferred 44, Union Pa cific 86V&, Gulf Oil 70, Mission Corp. 58, and Dow Chemical 44 Va. Railway issues lost ground In the bonds market but here, too, extreme declines were trimmed. One or two federal issues slipped but the general undertone was steadier after losing territory ear ly this week. Communist Party Chief In Chicago Surrenders CHICAGO, July 30 -VP- The communist party chairman for the Chicago district, pleaded inno cent today to charges of advocat ing the overthrow of the govern ment and was released on $5,000 bond. Gilbert Green, 41. one of 12 communist party leaders Indicted in New York 10 days ago, sur rendered to the U. S. marshal to day. He called his indictment "an act of gross moral and political debasement on the part of the Truman administration. New Show Tonight! Starts at Dusk -Mark Bellinger's naked cmr Barry FltsceraM Dorothy Hart The B tuns te ads "Blondie's Reward Color Cartoon LATE NEWS fj 411 III I rBONE itl MATXNEX DAILY FKOM 4 P. M. . . . aiid stmts TOiionnoni w r iMIMlilMII iJUtlVfoWliMi l!f:V!:W:Ul;VHj:iH: OrfoW loos fWf or Mowy JOHN EJUCtY Early Registering For Keizer School To Start Tuesday KEIZER, July 30 Advance registrations for the first four grades of Keizer school will be held starting Tuesday, August J, in the office of the principal, Ralph A. Nelson. Because of the rapid increase in population in the Kei zer area it has been found 'neces sary to know in advance the ap proximate number who will at tend this fall. Nelson said; First and second grade! pupils will register Tuesday and Wednes day, August 3 and 4, Nelson has announced, and third and! fourth grade pupils will register Wednes day and Thursday, Augus 4 and Hours will be from 9:30 a. m. to 12 and from 12:45 to 3 p. m. each day. First-grade pupils must bring their birth certificates with them when registering. All child ren who will be six years old by November IS may enter the first grade this year. ; Ends Today Opens: 1:45 I The Bishop's WUe" The Masnlficient KMfU Slur tine Tomorrow . Opens 1x45 rz5 MiTCUUn GREER KIRK DOUGLAS i;j r!io;:da fleiikg v RICHARD WEBB Second Featare "Adventure Islaad" f 0 Sf rnilAJtY StOOKS 118 J IS X MM Precinct Posts in. ''!! 1 Three democrats and three re publicans added their names Fri day to the list of candidates for precinct committeeman and com- mi teewoman, in filings with the Marion county clerk.. Democrats who filed wire Myr lori Moore, 463 N. Winter st, for Salem precinct 10: Arthur' V. and Abbie E. Dow, both of 130 N. 17th stJSalem 2. : -, j I (Republican aspirants were Va leria Grace i Webber, 4175 Port land rd., for Hayesrille Jprecinctr George P. ManoUs for West Silver Mat Dally front 1 I M. New Shewing! Iflf .! Strt i Erwia Ueadm J ,or IleaTen" I TJtJl Jl Opens C:45 Ti M. Open as Usual j During Remodeling : Now playlnzt Cary Grant . Jean Arthur Only Angels Hare Wings' XanAolph Scott j ' Frances Deel -Coast Guard" Newt f :4$ P. M. KASTOON , KAKNIYAL : i Tomorrow At 12:3 with i Keg. Showt Enda Today I (Sat.) Dana Andrews . "Deep Waters" Stuart Erwlh 4Headln, for Heaven Treaf tb C! vi nam ri cisYsav-toa I! AlnnaU Fox ewst -Battle of Berlin" B-23s Flx toj England! VS. Briilsk Vets j Cross Atlantic! Draft Law Explained! I- i t- James , ' Carney ? V "Each ;Dawn . Z I Dennis .Morgaa I mADMEN OF MISSOURI