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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1951)
1 1 ! t f I If - ' r - CSiy Mews IBirSeffs GUARD TO BE INSPECTED Technical inspection of all equip ; cent of company G, Salem nation al guard unit. U slated for Monday by representatives cf the regular , army instructor's staff from Van- couver" Barracks. The annual check will not include personnel at this time. - -" Landscaping and designing. No Job too large or too smalL F. A. Doerfler and Sons Nursery, 250 Lancaster. Dr. at 4 Corners. Phone 2-2549.- RINGS SAID MISSING Mrs. H. D. Rhode, 286 S. 16th st, reported to city police Saturday that two rings were missing from her home since October 10. One ring was valued at $70, value of the other unknown - Fresh killed turkeys 39c lb. Why not nut one in locker for Thanks- giving and Christmas and save? Orwigs Market, 3975 Silverton Rd. Ph. 26128. ADDED' TO CHAMBER Salem Chamber of Commerce has announced the addition to membership of The Flower Box, 1145 S. Commercial st, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles McDevitt, owners of Acklin's bootery and Acklin's junior bootery. Free demonstration of famous NECCHI SEWING machine by Linda Dean, factory representative, all this week at Ralph Johnson Appliances, 355 Center. CONTRACTORS TO MEET Members of .Salem Contractors Exchange will be Monday at 8 p. m. in Mayflower hall. C. H. Wick, president of the Architects Insti tute of Oregon will be guest speak - er. A buffet supper will follow the business session. ' Hartwell's Electric closed Oct. 18 Nov. 15 for vacation. - - SPEFI) LIMIT SET Marion county court was noti fied Sa.uiday tha: the state in? way commission hfcs ,made a 25 mile per hour speed ione on North Santia.n hi'ay Mm one-qni-.-ter mile west of Big Cliff dam s".e for on-haif mile -qstward, be yond the Sardine creek bridge Chuckwagon Cafe,. West Salem open from 6 ajn. to 2 am. Closed Mondays. , CAMERA CLUB MEET Dr. P. L. Purbrick of Willamette university will discuss hew devel o in nhntnoranhv at the Tuesday ; meeting of the Salem Camera club. . . , Moyers Beauty Shoppe, 1405 N. Commercial St. Permanent waves, $5 up. Dial 3-7202. Johns - Man ville shingles applied by Mathis Bros., 164 S. Com L Free estimates Ph 3-4642. , RUSSEIX STILL, 'FAIR Gene Russell, 26, Independence, seriously injured in an auto acci dent -north of Independence a week ago, was reported still m "fair" condition with fractured back and knee at Salem General hospital Saturday night. Now open Sunday 10 to 5. Jary - Florist, Capitol Shopping Center. Phone 3-7375, 2-48UZ. BUTTON MEET SLATED Fourth annual meeting of the Oregon State Button society will be held at the Senator hotel here Fri day. A state button show, open to the public, is scheduled for 3 to 9 p.m. ' Births FRANK To Mr.! and Mrs. Duane Frank, 2195 N. 4th st., a son, Saturday, October 20, at Sa lem Memorial hospital. i OBERMANN To Mr. and Mrs. Harry Obermann, 3395 Neff ave., a daughter, Saturday, October 20, at Salem Memorial hospitaLv " BARTELL To Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Bartell, 130 Rosemont ave., a daughter, Saturday, Oc tober 20, at Salem Memorial hos pitaL - j J LANDERS To Mr. and Mrs. Orval Landers, Mehama, a daugh ter, Saturday, October 20, at Sa lem Memorial hospital. AMOS To Mr. and Mrs. Henry Amos, Stayton route 1, a son, Saturday,-October 20, at Salem Me morial hospital. WHITEHEAD To Mr. and Mrs. Norman Whitehead, Turner, a son, Saturday, October 20, at Salem Memorial hospital. McLEAN To Mr. and Mrs. John McLean, Detroit, a son, Sat urday, October 20, at Salem Me morial1 hospital. PURCELL To Mr. and Mrs. Edward Puree 11, 4445 Sunnyview ave., a son, Saturday, October 20, at Salem General hospital, " JONES To Mr. and Mrs. Trevor Jones, Falls City, a daugh ter, Saturday, October 20, at Sa lem General hospital. i 1 RALLY DUE AT ST. HELENS "-f A chartered bus is to take mem bers of . the Degree of Honor to an all-day rally at St. Helens on Mon day. The bus, scheduled to leave at 8:30; a.m. Monday, will be at the Marion hotel. Mrs. Henry Henderson is in charge of reserva tions. j j " ' ' : Alsco aluminum storm windows and doors. Phone 3-3748 or 2-7838. SALEM CAFE LISTED Assumed business name of Park In, a cafe at 3005 Portland rd, was filed Saturday with Marion county clerk by Martha Williamson and Daisy Hanna. i - ' - Air - Steamship tickets anywhere. Kugel, 3-?7694. 153 N. High St. Alterations, slip covers, drapes, good workmanship. Formerly with Penneys.12-1879. 1 1 SLATE' NOMINATIONS Nomination of officers for the coming! year is scheduled for the weekly meeting of Central Town- send club No. 6 at 259 Court st Monday , at 7:30 p.m. Homecoming ci lairmen toi A - WU; Chosen Event chairmen for Willamette university's Homecoming Week end, October 26-27, were an nounced Saturday by Earl Atkin son, manager of the 1951 week end. Advisory committee is headed by Harold Silke, Springfield; Nan cy Lurhijarvi, Astoria; and Carl Blanesj Ryderwood, Wash. Bob Goff, of Corvallis, is in charge of the sign contest. The .annual noise parade throughout downtown Salem will be organized by Larry Pritchett, Lebanon.! Marlene Vincent, Medford, is. handling J publicity. George Bula nel, Palq Alto, Calif., has been named cleanup chairman. The Homecoming dance will be under the direction of George Col lins, Eagle Creek. He will be as sisted by Carolyn Crane, Portland, decoratfons; Eleanor Oakes, Port land, programs; Cal Cooper, Port land, )ighting; Sue McElhinny, Salem and Jane Pinkerton, Ferns dale, Wash., chaperones; Mary El len Phillips, Portland, refresh Is i ' : ' Church to Send -If - ! ; Food, Clothes To Navaioes Salem's First Baptist church will be the first stop for a truck which will carry six tons of foodstuffs and clothing to a new Navajo Children home at Cottonwood, Ariz. If The tome, now caring for 40 Navajo orphans, is being sponsored by the conservative Baptists of which the Salem church is an affiliate, j Foodstuffs are being collected here this S week at the church and will be loaded on the big truck Friday, t Later the truck will pick up additional collections at Port land, G adstone, Eugene and Med ford arid, other points along the routeA j , IdaLiiphio Gets Divorce 11 : MINDEN, Nev., Oct 20 (JP) Movie Star Ida Lupino divorced her producer husband, Collier Young, here today. She got the decree on grounds of extreme mental cruelty, but told reported I informally that neither she nor; Young had time to make the martin ee work. ; : She is : ready for another try, however for tomorrow she plans to marry Actor Howard Duff at her Glenbrook home on Lake Ta hoe. II 'Sleepy Hollow9 Chosen as Play J ; 0 For Playhouse "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" will be the first play for the "Story-time Playhouse," for which tryouts were held Saturday at Sa lem high school. The playhouse, weekly 15-min-ute radio , programs, will feature Salem youngsters from the 7th to 10th grades and is sponsored by the Salem Junior Women's club. About 75 reported for tryouts and the cast for 'Sleepy Hollow" was selected. Mrs. Dean Graunke, director; of the project reported. The program will be presented November 3. Salem Council Of Churches Presents L Stanley j I Jones Rrst Christian J Church i Today 3 PlM. Also' Octebtr 22, through October 26 at 70 PJA. U.S. Employes Elect Officers At Convention New officers elected Saturday by the Oregon Federation of Fed eral Employes, meeting at Che mawa, are J. R. Rhodes, Klamath Falls, president; Charles Lee, Portland, vice president, and Mark Taylor, jr., Klamath Falls, secretary. The next convention will be at Roseburg. The 10th annual convention was attended by 23 delegates from various federal services and about 20 visitors. Principal speaker was Dr. Wil liam -R. Van DersaL with the soil conservation service at Portland. He discussed the character of fed eral employes, what the govern ment would like to employ and how to improve federal service. ' People who work for the U. S. government are on the whole characterized by above-average understanding of the -value and benefits of service to the public and have greater-than-average feeling of responsibility for pub lic service," said Van DersaL ,- The government wants to hire persons well-trained in their spe cialties, with a good basic back ground, a sense of values, a- real desire to go on learning, a well grommed personality and with training in the science or art of human relations. Van Dersal said that improve ment of the service is possible through questioning """everything we do," improve ways of getting new ideas into use, improve pro cedures for giving credit where credit is due, recommend ways of cutting costs, improve methods for assuring public understanding. Salem Y 9th Tii Mississippi Swim Contest Early reports placed Salem YMCA in ninth place among 58 entries in the 14th annual "Down the Mississippi" swim, Physical Director Fred Cords said Satur day. The contest is half over and will end next Saturday. The competition is open to all Y M members, whose pool lengths of swimming are totaled daily and sent to Lawson YMCA, Chicago, where they are translated into ''map-miles' on the river's length. Through Friday 550 separate swims had been made here, total ing 18,640 pool lengths of 202 miles. Salem, which was in third place for the first day this year, was in 35th in 1950, but has closed as high as 10th spot. The contest includes YMCAs o.'tr the U. S and Canada. ,To date, 19 swimmers are work ing for the Ten Mile club, which calls for swimming at least one mile on each of 10 days in the competition. Only one trying for a repeat membership is Billy Dunsworth. ASSOCIATION TO MEET The Oregon Coast highway as sociation will hold its 21st annual convention at Hotel Gearhart Oct ober 28-30. Reports of the officers for the year will be heard. Gov. Dduglas McKay will be the speak er at the banquet Friday night. Don't Waste the Winter ... 1 . t.,- Take one or more commercial subjects at the Capital Business College 345 Court j Street Day and Night Classes NOW reat-grandmother's first party dress... was a dress Fashions have Changed since I860 when the first NEW HOME tewing machines were produced. Today there's "New Look" ... and an All-New NEW HOME. It's new inside and out All-New to give you perfect sewing easier, faster. See it today. fWatS TU yte M7. Just A Few Left At the Old Price Pi HoopDancp- " f A pi " ; I .... ' i 1 s 'i XJ - i CHEMAWA Tom Woody, Navajo student from Arizona, performs a hoop dance at a prorram for - Federal Employes convention held here Saturday night He was taught the difficult routine by . Stanley Uentillie, Navajo teacher-interpreter at Chemawa Indian school, who also per formed. Rotary Group to Send News to Troops Overseas That always-welcome mail for servicemen overseas got a boost ths week end from Salem Rotary club, which announced a program of individual letter writing. The cluo's international service committee, beaded by Elmer Berg luhd, urged that the club be sent addresses of Salem area residents overseas. Difficulty had ueen ex perienced in learning APO num bers, Jie noted, hence this appeal lo the public. Members of the group are to write personal letters about Salem news to the servicemen. The com mittee guaranteed that letters will ba sent to all men whore addresses are received. Addresses should be sent to Berglund, care oi Puufic Tele phone and Telegraph company, Salem. Chamber to Hear Eldridge K. C. Eldridge, head of the Eld ridge Food Sales Co. of Portland, will address Salem Chamber of Commerce at noon Monday in the Senator hotel. Drawing from his sales experi ence of the past 42 years, Eld ridge has announced as his topic, "The Human Equation In Busi ness." His appearance here has been arranged by the chamber and the Salem Retail Credit as sociation. They are urging retail merchants to attend. BUILT LIKE A FINE WATCH PrcUia spiral yi prvi4 pHtHy rs mn IvbrtatUM, t war ell claffc. emit niw nomi riATwaist loacrtoop stitcmno ACTION INSTANT KCVBSf flOATMG PtCSSHI FOOT WWa SKED CONTKOt tUUMN SCWMG LAMP WEST R4GHOUSI MOTOJ VUU SET OF ATTACHMENTS, United Nations Day PI aimed At Willamette Willamette university students Interested in United Nations have completed plans for the celebra tion of U. N. Day in Salem Wed nesday. ' : i: Designed to focus the attention of the- city on the progress made by United Nations to date, the special day will Include school room discussions, club speeches, special flag raising and chapel program at Willamette and radio shows. The campus chapter of United Nations 'Educational, . Scientific and Cultural organization was asked by Mayor Alfred W. Loucks to take charge of U. N, Day for the city of Salem. ; j - Six foreign students -will raise the U. N. flag on the local cam pus. They are Egil Okstad, Nor way; Ursula Glaeser, Germany; Tom Subia, Philippines; Ove Ton ning, Norway; Kemi Yokoi, Ja pan, and Jan Hajda, Czechoslo vakia. These students will be fea tured on a KSLM broadcast at 3:45 p. m. Dr. E. Stanley Jones, evangelist here for a preaching mission next week, will speak on a U. N. theme at a Tuesday student chapel, open to the public and a Wednesday noon meeting of the UNESCO group. William Agar from the U. N. speakers' bureau of New York, will speak at Lincoln school stu dents' assembly Thursday after noon. "U. N. and the Common Man" will be discussion theme for - a KOCO radio forum at 10 p. m. Wednesday, featuring Charles A. Sprague, Dr. Edward Kollman, Mayor Loucks, Dr. Victor H. Sword and students Wilma Aller, Tom Joseph, Earl Atkinson, Ernie Atkinson and Ernie Gordon. - Services Set Monday for Mrs. Neptune Final rites will be held at 3 p.m. Monday from Howell-Edwards for Mrs. Emma Wood Neptune, 74, who died Friday at the family home, 783 N. Capitol st. Burial will be in City View cemetery. ; Mrs. Neptune was born in Line ville, la.. April 6, 1877. She was married in Colby, Kan., in 1896, to Fred A. Wood, and came to the Salem area three years later. Her husband died 13 years ago and she was wed July 2, 1946 to W. F. Neptune, who also preceded her in death. i Survivors Include three children, Carl A- Everett T. and Emery Wood, all of Salem; four step children, James W. Wood of Jeffer son, Mrs. Minnie Apple of Salem, Mrs. Nora Robertson and Mrs. Doris Ransom, both of Turner; a sister, Mrs. Kate Litton of Line- ville, la., and live grandchildren DROP IT! WET ' ' : : : HARTMAN BROS, offer a ladies as a man's. Your Croton watch is the watch of today and tomor row, yet it costs no more than you would pay for an ordinary watch. Do not buy a watch of yesterday. Do not accept less than a true CROTON TIMEMASTER. L MIMMMMMMMMMMMI ' WSWJWfflW?gflgCMM MMMMMffMMMMI t II fMll a S J OUR J CROTON j J Vv WOMEN'S ; U0P r OF SEALED IN j j ACCURACY At last a watch you u-ftSiW don't have to coddle! These ' Vgg wP' Croton certified waterproof watches At last a watch yon don't have to coddle ! These Croton certified waterproof watches eo right into the water, right the dust . . . because their beauty and precision are sealed-in. right: Aquamaid C ... weep second, fef; Aquateen ... 17 jewels, steel back, $29.95 other Croton waterproof watches from $24.95 to $100.00 Yes, you may now open Jewelers of Salem Defense Director j Talks at Silverton? SILVERTON At the Thurs day night meeting of the Lions club, Maurice Schnorenberg, local civilian defense director, intro duced Captain Wharton, Marlon county director. Wharton cited the recent Detroit fire as an example of the importance of being pre pared In advance for any civilian emergency. He stated that the nat ural caused disaster and war were the two heeds for civilian defense and that either could occur at any time. . ; He also stated that Silverton rated high in the county and state in his civilian defense organiza tion, f f Demand for j Salem Plant's j Rugs Grows ' i -.i - - Oregon Flax Textiles, which re cently almost doubled its capacity, still may be hard put to keep up with the demand for rugs. ; Clyde Everett, manager, who re turned Saturday firm showing: in New York and in Oakland, Calif , said new patterns were "excep tionally well accepted," and indi cated capacity production of the west Salem plant was certain. The new ruga will be produced for the January market, including linen broadloom, wool chenille and all ; linen braided products, v The Oakland display was at tended by dealers from many parts of the Pacific coast, as well as by Detroit ofif cials ot National Auto motive Fibres of which Oregon Flax Textiles is a subsidiary. I Folk Dance Clinic Due at j Oregon State I CORVALLIS Nearly a thou sand folk dancing fans from all sections of Oregon are expected to attend the fifth anual folk dance clinic and iamboree at Oregon State college October 27 and 28. The events are open to anyone interested in square or folk danc ing, a type of entertainment that is sweeping the country in popu larity, even in large cities. An all-day clinic for those lead ing or teaching folk dancing has been scheduled for Saturday, Octo ber 27, in the Memorial Unioiv A mixer dance will be held that night and the big jamboree in the new coliseum will be from 2 to 5:30 Sunday afternoon. I About 800 attended the first jam boree held in the coliseum last year. Hosts are members of the local Promenaders club and the women's physical education de partment. E r m a Weir, assistant professor of women's physical ed, is director. i t Jamboree dances will include the Maxina, Skaters Waltz, The Rob- IT! SMACK IT!! i ' -J 1 ! Croton waterproof watch as well ! through 17 jewels, steel back, radium diaL 4o.UU an account on a fine watch at XX t SRS i i Liberty at State The Statesman. Salem, Oregon, Sunday October 21, 19515 erts. Gypsy Wine," "Hambo, Four Gents Star, Hurry Hurry, Jessy CORRECT CARE OF THE EYES IS IMPORTANT, TOO! An ounce of prevention fs worth a pound of cure . take care of your eyes now, to avoid an undue correction later. Come in at your conenience for scientific eye examination ... and In the mean time, avoid unnecessary eye strain. Dr.Henry E.Morris . OPTOMETRISTS AT Morris Optical Co. 444 Stoto St. Phone t-5521 Free Parklnc pers Car Park In Hot! H evawe--at swmm eu a nuiiv belna- served by M e r r I s Optical Co. Dr. Henry E. Morris 155 N. Liberty - 1 , : i 100 Wool Worsted REG. 39.75 -SMARTLY. STYLED Brent quality Tailored of all-wool worstetf-the tightly woven kind that resists wrinkles and assures long wear. In overptaids, sharksklni, , gabardines or stripes single or double breasted. New fall colors. ; v USE WARDS CONVENIENT MOriTHLY PAYMENT PLAN . , . : ; '$ - Polka 'Square arid Arkansas Trav- ' leler. j : " t ' - . 1 , S Dr. Kenneth W.Morris at the Shep- i and the Mar- rm b artillA I Dr. K. W. Merris I I V. Jr. -' A 4 - - lii-v Phone. 3-3191 3 i I 1 " ' i . 3 ft ; ! -I -: ' yf - - 34.88 1 4 - - t I - f I