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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1948)
Thm Statesman. SaUm, Oregon. Thursday. October II, 1943 HeiseOfficially In West Salem Mayor's Race WEST SALEM. Oct. 20 Coun cilman W. C. Heise filed nominat ing petitions today with the city clerk for the office of mayor of West Salem. He will oppose in cumbent Walter Musgrave at the November 2 election. Heise. a member of the council for several, years, has two years remaining in his term in office. With Friday the final day for filing for the election, all incum bents except City Clerk Robert Pattison and Treasurer . Thelma Brown have filed. Incumbents and opposition have filed for all three council vacancies. Opposing tickets, headed by the mayoralty candidates, will appear at a special city council meeting Stocks and Bonds CVwripfled frg-Jhe Asodatd Pi Oct. X BONO AVEBAGES 1 IS Wednesday .... Pfev1ou day Week at .. Month a Year ago . Rails ladust UtU rproi mi ioo.a ta.7 MS 100.S 100 to 7 I0.t 100 OS IOCS 99 91 tOl.S 193J9 C2.4 (2.5 2.9 S3. 1 9.7 STOCK ATEIACCI ' so is is so Indurt Bails Util Stk.s Wednesday M.i 45.3 40J9 99 Previous day M 4 4.t 41. 99.$ Week ago . 13) 44. S 40 S 99.9 Month mgo SO.T 44. Z 40 3 S7J Year S3 SS.7 43 91 MAN DIES IN RAJX ACCIDENT UMATILLA, Oct '2O-0?-A car rammed the rear of an oil tanker near here last night, killing. Jack Anders 25-year-old visitor from Fairfield, Iowa. Dave Mittlesdorf, 28, Hermiston, was seriously hurt. Both Anders and Mittlesdorf were riding in the car. Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the city hall for "full discussion of issues and candidacies." i , For proof see our ad below. It doesn't matter where Date Bmy paints ertffnate . . . the im portant thing la that they dial and we have them! Plan today to redecorate year home with DUTCH BOY PAINTS! We have a complete variety of colors and types.-; Also . . . DUTCH BOY UTILITY PASTE For Picket Fences and Eeash Lamber Other nationally known makes of paints, varnishes, shellacs, primers and sealers ... THE BEST PAINT IS THE MOST ECONOMICAL FAINT! THAT'S WHY WE RECOMMEND DUTCH BOY! We rent: Electric Fleer Sanders $1.99 per day. 7Se per hear Electric Fleer Edxers SLSs per day. 50e per hear Electric Fleer Buffers $234 per day, 75e per hone Electric Fleer Buffers (light) 4L5t per day. Me per hear Wall-paper Steamers $2Jf per day, 75 per hemr Macaroni Is believed to .hare been la trad need into Italy by early Greek colonist. The Chinese were acq vain ted with the dish hi pre-Itallaa tiamee, 1 Handy Book ef Curious Informa tiea, by William ft. Walsh, page SIS. It's Convenient U Shop at The Dateh Bey Paint Store i sen puce to tar e::3 tmi F.0.0K W.k aafsVBaafkgk f hL asBBa ma .ar c m mm i WSMJTSOUfJD" Your owa private "Doocmaa" al ways ready to let you la or out! - Yea, Silent Sound opens or closes your garaso door, tuns . lights oa or off, while you stay ia th comfort aad protection of your car. J aft touch the ifaSeaaaie button oa your dash raia or shine ... Bight or day! Push' buttoa Imng k yours through the aaagic oi Siltnt Sod! f MM Cease BAmmt 1H1 "Strand" Lifetime Garage Poor .,Sel I rw m r a OiSIaJ A (AUTOSOrilC) Sturdily Built oi STEEL Specially Treated to Racist tha Borages oi Sun and Bain f-KeUh Brown Lumber Yard I Front A Court. 3-tlSS Ss4 as 4tkoat ilaaagisi say hwm oopy of "Sweat b Bit NnsT M.-. . Aadrsss i Ctey , . , . Sw Requires 'only 3 Inches cltaranct, only 1Y pounds starting lift Is quicldy and easily in stalled. Totally; disap pears. Complete With Hardware Only CLOSE OUT SPECIAL Lift-Lite Garage Door Hardware - $14 Se in Front and Court fits. Phone 3-9183 Frank Sutton. Resident of Stayton, Dies STAYTON. Oct. 20 Frank H. Sutton, 78, former carpenter who had lived in Stayton for the past IS months, died Wednesday in a Salem hospital, where he had been for four days. He had been in ill health for some time. Funeral services will be Friday at 2 pjn. from Weddle Funeral home here,- the Rev. Willard Buck ner of Stayton Baptist church of ficiating. Burial will be in Fox Valley Oemetery. ! Sutton was born June 27, 1870, In Hancock, Iowa. On Sept. 30, 190S, he was married' to Emma Hazen at Fairfax, S. D. They came to Oregon 22 years ago and lived for -some time in Salem before moving to Lyons 4 Vt years ago. Survivors are the widow; a son. Frank R. Sutton of Waldport; three daughters, Mrs. Lena Wilson of Lyons, Mrs. Gladys Billings of Salem and Mrs. Syble of Gresham; 11 grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Another son. PFC Emery C. Sutton, was killed dur ing World War II. Oregon Lumber company after coming here from Michigan in 1903. He later was associated with numerous northwest lumber companies. Henrv C. Clair, 83, .a ' Lumberman' Dies PORTLAND. Oct. 2(MP)-llen-ry Cornelius Clair, long-time Ore gon lumberman, died suddenly last night a few hours after inspecting some of his Willamette valley tim ber holdings. He was 83. A former president of the Pa cific. Logging congress, he be came a partner in the Washington- Fresh Gains in Stock Market NEW YORK. Oct, 20 -AV The stock market made fresh gains to day in its October drive ahead. In the fastest trading in about three weeks, key steel stocks hit new highs for the year. Gains gen erally ran from fractions to around 2 points. Rails came in for con siderable attention but buying in this group was less aggressive than in steel stocks. Volume expanded to 1.180.000 shares from 1,030,000 Tuesday. Trus was the third lull day in a 1 row that turnover has topped the 1,000.000 share mark. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks moved up .3 of one point to 69.8, a top since early Septem ber. The advance lifted the aver age price level right under the nose of the previous high scored in early September, which in turn was a peak since mid-July. It was the fourth day in a row that the market advanced. The number of individual issues traded expanded to 1,064, of which 555 advanced and 256 declined. Vallcv Obituaries E. C. Davis SILVERTON, Oct. 20 Funeral services for E. C. Davis will be held from Ekman Memorial chap el, Friday at 2 p.m. with burial in Belcrest. The Rev. Ben Brown ing will officiate. Car Prowlers Busy in Salem Four car prowls were reported to city police Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. Mrs. T. G. Royer, Albany, re ported theft of two beef roasts, a billfold and shoulder-type hand bag from her automobile parked in front of the postoffice Wednes day morning. Theft of an Eastman ; 116 cam-j era from auto parked in the 200 ' block of Court street early Wed- ; nesday was reported to : police by G. W Xytle, 1890 S. Commercial St. Harold Robinson. 112 Union St.. complained to police that a Car radio was stolen from his auto-1 mobile parked in the 500 block; of Marion street Tuesday night and theft of rifle shells,1 keys and groceries from auto parked in 300 block of North High street was reported by Wayne Sipe, -Salem ', Large Demand ForJSoybeans CHICAGO. Oct. :HP)-A hike in the amount of soybeans which may be exported before Decem ber 31 caused a strong demand for that commodity on the board of trade today. Prices advanced 8 to 7H cents a bushel in active dealings. While soybeans stole the spot- light,; the rest of the market turn- ea in a mgniy satisfactory per formance for the bulls. Only con tracts! to dose lower were May and July wheat, in Which some selling developed on predictions of rain in western Oklahoma and the Texas panhandle. j Wheat closed V to power to 4 higher, corn was i higher, oats were i-lVk higher, rve was 2U. 3t4 higher, soybeans were 6-7H nigner ana lard was 10 to 43 cents a hundred pounds higher. Touching off the burin in soy beans was an agriculture depart- TUmiED SHOE SEBVICE Twice A Week Pick-up & Delivery Leave Shoes at Stroll's Variety Store Sundslrotn Shoe Repair 1947 State. Salem i You may Bghrfy flip a coin to decide some trivial Isswe. Ruf where HeoMi is of stake, don'f gombtm. Bring your Doctor's prescription directly to Prescription Headquarters. Hero row are assured the most careful compounding by skilled, registered pharasadsts fresh, potent drugs, and ' uniformly fair prices, WILLETTS CAPITAL DRUG STORE I Corner State Liberty j Fhene 3-3118 j i ment announcement of supple mental export allocations of 3,000,- 000 bushels for the October-De cember quarter. Previously, 235,- 833 bushels had been exported for that quarter. I Mfd'i ii w aT&bJ St HVW&STm ! Whea thi leivtij are filling... knifes, op ijour home! LET FLOWERS DO IT FOR Y001 1 jCvttVtMmStiti L , ( ia, iir.r.a.t..,,,. n t ins N. Ltaerty fit. I Sail It r I I 1 m : p to In 1906 at the agre of 21, tfeal McGinley came to the United States from County Donegal, Ireland. Five years later hemoved to Lompoc, California, with his bride and went to work as a "pumper" in the oil fields for Union Oil Company. Today i he is still doing; the same kind of work in the same area for the same company .x 2e But during this 37 years with Union Oil Company, Mr. and Mrs. McGinley have raised a family of 7 children 6 boys and 1 girl. Two of the boys were killed in World War II. t Of the remain ing five children, Francis, a graduate of U.S. C, is now manager of a welding equipment company; Ann, a college graduate, is married; Joseph is in the engineering department of an aircraft firm; Lawrence is with a utilities company, and James is a practicing physician in San Francisco. 3i Neal McGinley gave us permission to tell his' story in order to drive home one fact. He didn't! achieve all these! advantages for his family'by be4 coming president of Union Oil Company. (In fact, j the job he holds today s comparable to the one he held in 1911.)Neither!did hedoitbygoingintoj business for hirriself. Hel simply went to work. 84 v 40 x aa a a m m . Jl aa a am a . ' " tdiftL ..v r( ' Av. hourly U.S. o Mm Mil ! production per worker" CANADA GERMANY 41 GR. BRITAIN RUSSIA JAPAN $36 $36 ifl25 PM-WAIt Oe But our American economic system offered hitn greater opportunity for productive work than he could have found anywhere else in the world. Work by itself means nothing. Only work thaf produce s something which a man can ex change for the things he needs is of any value. Consequently the more a man can produce with an hour's work the higher his standard of living. 5 During the 37 years that Neal McGinley worked for Union Oil, his capacity to produce in creased steadily. For during that time the Com pany increased the tools-per-employee more than threefold. Consequently production-per-employee went up. And, as a result, Neal McGinley has al most tripled his take-home pay. He makes 6 times as much per hour worked today as he did in 1911, and he works less than half as many hours 40 instead of &4. 1 -! " r - 6e In other words, even though we all don't" end up as presidents and we all don't go into busi ness for ourselves, the American economic system; is still just as important to all of u$. For each; manVstandard of li vingj depends directly on what he) can produce. lAnd out American system has son ! encouraged the Introduction of new tools and tech niques that, year after year, the average Amerl-g can has been able to produce more and more and thereby continu to improve hisstandard of livingi fin honor of Lt. Raymond McGinley, P-51 pilot killed in England, and Corp. John McGinley, killed in the Battle: of; the Bulge, V. FJ.W. named their Santa Maria (Cal.) pdt AfcGinley Btothere Feet. OF CALIFORNIA INCORFOKATI D IN CALIF Oft NIA, OCTOBER 17, ISfO ThUteriei, sponsored by the people of Union Oil Company, is function. W hope you 11 feel free L send in any suggestion or; criticirms you have to offer. Write:The President, Union Oil Company Union Oa Building. Lot Angeles U, California t i 1 -