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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1949)
f The Statesmen, golem, Oregon, Sandat Angael 11. 1949 Bids CaUed on New Union1 High For Monmouth-Independence THE VALLEY NEWS COLUMNS rrom The Oregon Statesman's Valley Correspondents INDEPENDENCE Bids are be ing advertised for the new high school bulldlng(of the newly form ed Monmouth-5ndependence school district No. 13-C to be located on the site purchased by the school board half way between Indepen dence and Monmouth on the 40 acre Kelley farm. , The building is to be of reinfor ced concrete with 13 classrooms, administration facilities, a kitchen and cafeteria, aymnasium with a stage and locker rooms, garage buildings and a shop building. The school will not have a base ment except for the locker rooms which will be beneath the gym nasium. Materials to be used include steel sash, glassblock, asphalt tile flooring, some ceramic tile and accoustical tile ceiling. The roof will be flat built-up. The shop will be situated in a separate structure to be known as the Smith-Hughes building. Bids have been invited separ ately ontne general construction, mechanical work and electrical work. They will be opened at the Independence grade school at 8 p. m. on August 31. Annand and Kennedy, Portland architects who drew the plans for the proposed Stl YOU3 FAVORITE come to ii rr IN STEREOSCOPIC FULL-COLOR FY. VIEW-MASTER PICTURE REELS Children and grown-ups, too will gets thrill when they mc their favorite Fairy Tale characters "come to life" in the enchanting magic of dine - dimensional full - color View-Master picture. Each tale Is told in seven stereoscopic scenes mounted in one View Master Reel. Reels are inter changeable for View-Master Ster eoscopes and Projectors. PAIKY TALIS AVAILABLE H.mil S Oratal &.W.Ik Jacfc mm Hf iumtalfc TV liltl fiat Smw Wtttf Irttl. Hack mmkm Dm Uflf Dvcklinfl Othar Vtew-Moitw subjacts include: Switzerlond, Englond, Howoil, North, Ontrol, 0"d South Americo, Flowers, Animolt. Over 2100 full-color Vtew SAostar pictures on 7 -scan Keels now available ot loss than 5c each. t;:is, 3S I He , $t.00 ft, : .'CTO . . , V . . $4139 t: TVC U PICAS Y tox , '-. :i SMS structure, will issue blueprints and specifications to those wishing to bid. j f I . It la hoped that the contract may! be let and work started this fall so the building may be com pleted by next September for the fall term of schooL, 1 Albany Delegate For DUV Meeting Off to Indianapolis ALBANY Mrs. j Alma Curran, recently elected state president of the Daughters of Unjon Veterans, left Albany August 20, for Indian apolis, Ind.. to attend, the nation al convention of the organization. Mrs. Curran is a member of Ida McKinley Tent, No, 17 of Albany. On the way east Mrs. Curran plans to stop at Bemidji, Minn., where she will visit a brother, Frank Sexauer, who; she has not seen for 40 years.! Attending the convention of the? Daughters, as well as that of the Grand Army, will? be Theodore Penland, Port land, commander-inchief of the Grand Army of Ihe Republic. Spe cial cars are leaving Seattle, Wash., for the convention city, and will carry delegates from Alaska, Washington and Oregon. NEWMAN'S HAVE VISITOR EAST SALEM Mrs. N a d 1 a Hocker of Walla Walla, Wash., is a guest this week In the home of her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and "Mrs. Louis Neuman. Enrollment to Top 500 Mark At Willamina WILLAMINA Enrollment ov er 300 is expected at the Willamina grade school, Principal Kenneth Ramey has announced. Ramey announced also that the teaching staff Is now complete with four teachers added. They are Dale Johnson, who will teach the sixth grade; Mrs. Eula Petite, fifth grade; Darlene Jones, fourth grade and Estella Klohs, second grade. Returning teachers are Ramey. Mrs. Susie V. Emmons, Holland Kerr, H- O. Kravic, Betty Kerr, Mrs. Grace Herzberg, Mrs. Louis Macpherson, Mrs. lone Yeo, Mrs. Ruth Miles, Mrs. Nellie Mondy. Mrs. Ethel Ray, MiM Georgiana Spicer, Mrs. Frances Lawson, Mrs. Irma Duggan and Mrs. Gayette Barnett. Mrs. Mary Davis will be school secretary and Russell Miles and Frank Allen will serve as custodians. VFW District Officer Visits Willamina Post WILLAMINA George Stone, district department officer of the VFW, was a guest of the local VFW at its regular meeting Mon day evening. It was announced that the local post will get 15 percent of the pro fit of the carnival which has been operating the past week on the VFW grounds. I. fcpl &z- tW SWAMC ' sie.ts There's a gleam in fashion's eye... by Red (Gddi Cross .; J tiMrtra i i. M Prophetic oi tail s newer, gentler elegance our smooth Polished Calfs. Strikingly simple, they've a special affinity fo your new fall suit. And they'vethat special Red (Gold) Cross fit. Come in. See them. i ed Cross Shoes Towns Study Plans For Joint Sewage Disposal Facilities ' MONMOUTH Monmouth and Independence councilxnen are en deavoring to work out a program for a sewage disposal plant to ac commodate both towns. Potential construction of the new union high school makes the sewage project essential, and soon. The feasibility of a joint shar ing of expense in construction ap pears to be probable, with im provement of service to both towns an important factor. Water for the new plant may be secured either from Monmouth or Independence electric power will very likely come from Mon mouth's municipal plant. An in vestigation of the possibilities of a drilled well for supplying water for the new high school is underway. Concert to Be At 3 Today in Willson Park First of two Sunday concerts to conclude the summer season will be presented by Salem municipal band at 3 o'clock this afternoon in Willson park. Prof. Maurice W. Brennen is the director. This program and another next Sunday are sponsored by Salem local 315, American Federation of Musicians, with proceeds from the union's national recording fund. The program today includes: The Westerner March Jewell Finale from the New World Symphony .Dvorak Selection from Carmen Bizet The Conqueror March Teike Rhythms of Rio ...Bennett; Intermission Midnight in Paris Conrad and Magidson March Williams Blue Danube Waltz Strauss Purple Carnival March Alford Faculty Members For MM City Schools Listed MILL CnV Vernon Todd has announced the faculty members for the fall term which will begin September High school members are prin cipal, H. R- Bayiess, Mrs. Edith Mason, Frederic Rugh, Hope Ba ney. and Burton Boroughs. Grade school: Evangeline Shattuc, For est Holloman, Mrs. Clyde Rod gers, Mrs. Lloyd Sletto, Alice Smith, Sigrum Crimstad, Zeta Prichard, Mrs. Catherine Lyons, Mrs. George Stafford, Mrs. John Felie and Marion Swartz. All new students will register in the Mill City schools Sept 2 from 9 to 12 a. m. First faculty meeting will be held Sept 1. Kansans Visit Schwab Family at Mt. Angel MT. ANGEL Rt. Rev. Msgr. William Schaefers of Wichita, Kansas, Rose and Albina Huslig, also of Wichita, and Ralph and Co lin Boor, of Ponca City, Oklahoma, visited at the Herman Schwab home during the past week en route to California. Hhe monsig nor was a guest of the Benedic tine abbey. Mr. and Mrs. Clete Mamie and son Jerry and Mrs. Ed Stolle and Kathleen will leave by motor Monday morning for Circle Mon tana where the former will visit while Mrs. Stolle and her daugh ter continue to Long Prairie, Minnesota, to visit with Mrs. Stolle's mother. The group plans to return together in about two weeks. Lutheran Pastor To Give Firsf Service Sept. 11 WILLAMINA The new pastor of the Emanuel Lutheran church, the Rev. Waldemar G. Hintz, will have his first services here Sept 11. according to student pastor Da vid Getiendaner, who will return to his studies in Minneapolis, Minn., after his final service here August 28 or September 4. For the past 44 yearvthe Rev. Hintz has been a membefxpf the staff of the division of American missions. His work has been in government housing projects in San Pedro, Calif., Vanport, Balti more, Md., and Willow Run, Mich. Valley Obituaries Aliseo J. Fry WILLAMINA Funeral services were held Thursday, August 18 at the Methodist church in Sheri dan for Alison J. Fry, late resident of Sheridan . who passed away Monday at the age of 73 years. In terment was in the Sheridan Ma sonic cemetery. Mrs. Anna Louisa Harper ALBANY Mrs. Anna Louisa Harper, 72, died suddenly at her home here Friday, Aug. 19. Fu neral services were held from the Fisher Funeral home at 10 o'clock, Saturday, Aug. 20. Rev. Heath Lowery will officiate. Burial will be in St. John's cemetery. Anna Bolen was born Septem ber 16, 1877, in Smithfield, 111. She had lived in Kansas, Iowa, and Oklahoma previous to com ing to Oregon in 1942. She was a member of Beulah Rebecca lodge No. 35 of Albany, and of the As sembly of God church. In 1899 at Cherokee, Kan., she was married to John Sherman Harper. He died in 1928. Surviv ing is one daughter, Mrs. Clara Sprague of Scio, and two brothers, S. Frank Bolon of Albany, and W. E. Bolon of Oakland, Calif. Bmrtred Clyde Fiery 1 " r ALBANY Burtred Clyde Fiory 74, died at his home at ; Shedd Thursday night, Aug. 19. Fuoeral services will be held from the Fortmiller-Fredericsen chapel at 2 o'clock Monday, Aug. 22. Rev. Orville Mick will officiate. Burial will be in Sand Ridge cemetery. Born at Colfax, Wash., October 20, 1874, Flory spent pert his early life in Linn county. -Hf at tended the old Albany college and finished his education in the class of 1898 at Sodaville. He was a member of Shedd lodge Ai F, and A. M. Flory was a son of the late Abraham-Polk Flory and Mary Leedy Flory, early pioneers of the Plainview community. Since 1919 he had lived in the Shedd Commu nity, going there from Tacoma, Wash., where he had lived the previous ten years. He wis a re tired farmer. J At Tacoma. Wash., on June 12, 1907, he married Wilma Nichols. She died in 1943. Surviving are two sons, Keith M. of Salemj and James C. of Kahma. Wash. and one daughter, Dorothy Flory of Shedd. Two sister, Mrs. Carrie Parker of Renton, Wash,, and Mrs. Fena Feeder of Tacoma; Wa.h., also survive as do four grandchildren. Mackams Leave For West Virginia After Amity Visit AMITY Mr. and Mrs. Steve Mackams left this week for West Virginia where he will take up his studies as a law student. They came to Oregon in June and spent the summer here with-her parents, Mrt -and Mrs. G. B. Abraham. 4 Barbara Hansbury, niece of Er- InesttiGlbbs, arrived from Michi gan uui weck IVl V 131k W1U1 UVl uncles Ernest and John Gibbs. Other guests at the Gibbs home last week have been Mrs. Roy Shields, and Mr. and Mrs. Harris Dusenbury of Portland. Mrs. Florence Kirkwood is en route to Newberry, New York where she will attend the wedding of her son Larry, and Miss Joan Bowling. Valley Births Albany Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Cole are parents of a 7-pound 14 ounce baby girl born at the Al bany General August 17. Dr. and Mrs. Carl Yalillen be came parents of a 6-pound 15 ounce son at the Albany General August 18. On August 18, at the Albany General, a 7-pound 7 -ounce son was born to Mr. and Mrs.' Don Starks. Willamina A daughter,' J u d y Lee, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jqhnson of Sheridan, August 13 at the McMinnville hos pital. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Harpole of Willamina, and Mr. and Mrs. Lyman John son, formerly of Sheridan Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Stone of Willamina are the parents of a son Michael Stephen, born Aug. 12 at a Dallas hospital. A daughter, Anita Dawn, was bom Aug. 11 in McMinnville to Mr. and Mrs. Curtis BenefilL Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles McBee and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar BenefilL J electric bottle-warmer and vaporizer $95 : by Spartan W f heats bottle without boiling water You'll cut down on countless, tiresome footsteps from crib to kitchen with; this convenient, lime-saving nursery device. The safe warming unit heats quickly . . . operates on A.C. The specially-designed top converts ' ' I I the bottle warmer to a vaporizer. Find.it a handy item for I I I ! I 5 traveling, tool Burgundy o Ivory plastic Mail and Phone Orders Promptly filled - - . i I I - CAPITAL DRUG STORE Corner 'State Liberty Streets I 1 I I I i I .1 I. 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