Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 25, 1937, Page 7, Image 7

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    WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1937
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON
, CITY CONCERT
SEASON FINDS
WIDE VARIETY
Muiic and the dance will be better
than ever represented on the calen
der of attractions ll&ted for the
Portland public auditorium nest
winter, according to announcement
of the Ellison-White bureau, Port
land concert management. Thirteen
different performances have been
scheduled by the bureau for the
coming season, embracing twelve
distinct attractions. Headed by such
great names as Nelson Bddy, Lily
Pons and the Salzburg Opera guild,
the Ellison-White schedule has been
developed with musie lovers from
the entire Willamette valley region
in mind.
Two distinct concert series have
been scheduled for the coming seas
Jon. The larger of the two series,
which opens November 0, with the
first personal appearance in the
state of Oregon of Lily Pons, distin
guished Metropolitan Opera color
atura soprano, will include Nelson
Eddy, popular screen and radio bari
tones; Kalhryn Melsle and John
Charles Thomas, respectively con
tralto and baritone of the Metro
politan Opera company; the first
performance of the Salzburg Opera
Guild; Shan Kar and his Hindu bal
let; and Jose Iturbl. eminent Span
ish pianist. A concert by Lanny Ross,
popular radio tenor, will constitute
an extra attraction.
The shorter concert series, which
will open after the first of the new
year, will include the second per
formance of the Salzburg Opera
Guild, Trudl Schoop and her comic
ballet; Marian Anderson, phenom
enal negro contralto; and Percy
Grainger, Australian composer-pian
ist.
v CALIFORNIA HAS
AUTO SURVEY MADE
Sacramento, Calif., Aug. 24 (U.PJ
Whether California will continue its
present motor vehicle registration
at various border stations will de
pend on the results of a survey
now In progress, State Director of
Motor Vehicles Ray R. Ingels said
yesterday.
Ingels said several complaints
from motorists who charged In
spectors with "arbitrary methods,
together with a suggestion that mo
tor vehicle inspection be operated
t Independently of the department of
agriculture prompted the research.
At present automobile registra
tion for out-of-state motorists is
conducted In conjuctlon with plant
quarantine stations at several
points, especially in southern California.
The motor vehicle department de
pends to a considerable degree on
statistics compiled by its regis
tration stations for Its enforcement
of the motor caravaning law, now
under a court test to determine Its
validity.
Mrs. Huber Hostess
Lyons Mrs. Roy Huber enter
tained a group of young folk wlti
a dinner party, honoring the birth
day anniversary of her daughter.
Miss Maxyne. Covers were placed
for Miss Maxyne Huber, guest of
honor. Miss Germaine Smith, Miss
Gertrude Smith, Mr. Harold Pendle
ton, Maurice Shelton, Milton Bell,
all of Stayton, Lee Shelton of Al
bany, Donald Huber and the hos
tess. Mrs. Roy Huber, of Lyons.
T 7
ALLOT $42,750
TO AID STUDENTS
Washington, Aug. 29 (PH The na
tional youth administration an
nounced yesterday authorizations
totaling $8,156,250 for employment
of needy hljh school students dur
ing the next school year, a reduction
of $2418,790 from last year's budget.
The announcement said alloca
tions for college and university stu
dents, which would be made in the
next week or ten days, would bring
the student aid program total to
about $20,000,000, compared with last
year's $28,139,000.
Under the new program schools
will be permitted to aid 10 percent
of their enrollments as of October.
1)38. Previous regulations allowed
them to aid 12 percent as of Octo
ber, 1834.
If all schools gave students the
limit average payments of $6 per
month, the NY A said, approximately
151,000 would benefit in the 1937-38
school year. However, average pay
ments In the peak month of last
April were $4.98 and the same
monthly average would permit aid
to 184.900 under the new program.
New quotas by states as compared
with last year's, and the employment
quotas based on the $6 a month Urn
it included: Oregon, 1938-37 quota
57,000; 1937-38 42,750; employment
quota at $6 per month 791.
LANGLEY FROWNS
AT PAROLE SYSTEM
Portland, Aug. 25 (P Lotus L.
Langley, member of the state par
ole board, said yesterday a single
officer could not look after the av
erage of 200 ex-prisoners now on
parole.
Langley, former Multnomah coun
ty district attorney, appeared at
the community chest budget hearing.
"The Oregon prison association
fills this gap," he said. "There ts
no other organization which at
tempts to cover the work of as
sistance and protection to prisoners,
paroled prisoners, probationers and
their families."
Mrs. Lettle V. Oood, prison as
sociation secretary, asked $3600 in
community chest support for next
year.
Hera art Hie queen and princess chosen by Astoria, Or, for
its annual regatta, leading water festival of the Northwest, to be
held September I, 2, 3, 4 and 5. Above, from left, ara Princesses
Marjorie Agar, Coraballa Abbott, Faya Rica, Gladys Knight,
Norma Wooden, and Queen Jesn Maunula, Below, Queen Jean,
17-year-old Astoria high school girL
Rotary Camouflage
For Jews, Says Buck
Berlin, Aug. 35 W) Walter Buch,
chief justice of the Nazi party Ju
dicial system, yesterday called up
on German officials to force their
employes to quite the Rotary club
because, he said, it serves as a "cam
ouflage for Jews."
Nazis themselves were ordered to
resign from the organization by De
cember 31, and army officers were
advised to do likewise.
XBr .jOSr
ERNEST BOOTH
WRITES AGAIN
Placervlile, Calif., Aug. 35 UR
At a cottage in this mountain min- I
lng town, Ernest Booth today re
sumed his honeymoon which was
interrupted 13 years ago, and his
fiction writing which was suppres
sed by Folsom prison authorities.
He was released on parole yester
day after serving 13 years of a 25
year sentence lor bank robbery He
emerged Into a world from where
he was banished as a public enemy
In 1924 to find himself a literary
figure of note.
He began writing after he was Im
prisoned and found, he said, that
it was "a better racket than steal
ing, so why steal any more?
His stories included "Ladles of
the Mob." which was made into a
motion picture starring Clara Bow;
'Stealing Through Life, and We
Rob a Bank." They were stories
of crime, criminals and prisons and
were publicized by Henry u Menc
ken of the magazine American Mercury.
At his cottage here, his wife Val-
verne Booth was waiting. They
were married the day Booth was
arrested for a bank robbery at Oak
land.
For her, Booth had a glowing
tribute.
I Just want to say that in these
days of quick advance and cheap
deceit, here is the woman who has
shown unusual loyalty and devo
tion. Thanks to her I ara on parole
today. If It were not fur her, I
might be dead now, killed In an at
tempt to break prison.'
in an attempt to escape during
the early days ox his confinement,
Booth was crippled for life. He
made a rope of blankets and was
sliding down from the prison hos
pital ward when another convict cut
the rope and let him drop two stor
ies. Both his legs were broken.
He had been suffering from pul
monary tuberculosis and that Illness
was a contributing factor in his
parole.
Sublimity Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Benedict and La von e and Mrs. Paul
Zuber spent the week-end at Newport.
7 ynri !i
NOTHING IS TOO GOOD for Seablscult, Mrs. C. 8.
Howard's champion runner, rated the year's leading handicap horse.
The owner, with her pet Scottie under her arm, is shown looking
over the prize money winner at Saratoga Springs, N. where he
gets expert care.
STEFANI SEES NEW
CHINESE NATION
Turin, Italy, Aug. 25 m Alberto
de Stefanl, former Italian minister
of finance and until lately a finan
cial advisor to the Chinese govern
ment, predicted today that the
present Slno-Japanese conflict
would end United States and Eur
opean "special privileges" In China
and bring a united Chinese nation.
This united nation, he said, might
conceivably Join with Japan to
carry out the principle of "Asia for
the Asiatics."
Professor de Stefanl telegraphed
his predclt'on to the newspaper La
Stampa of Turin from the steamer
Victoria, on which he is en route
from China to Italy.
He predicted the oriental war
would assume great proportions and
that China would be able to resist
Japan with prolonged success.
"Her military machine, he said,
"has been greatly improved."
Bennett Forced to
Tell Story to Jury
Portland, Aug. 25 VP) District
Attorney James Bain issued a sub
poena yesterday for City Commis
sioner J. E. Bennett demanding that
he appear before' the grand Jury
and reveal any Information he
possesses that certain police officers
used city cars to make collections
from Chinese lotteries.
He declined to appear voluntar
ily. The commissioner was grant
ed until Tuesday to get his evidence
In shape.
In a vacuum water bolls almost at
the freezing point.
FOOD-HANDLERS
BILL DELAYED
Klamath Palls, Aug. 25 W
Klamath Falls' food-handler crisis
was checked for mt least a month
Monday night when the city council
voted to postpone enforcement of a
new ordinance requiring semi-annual
physical examinations tor but
chers, grocery clerks, restaurant
workers and others from Septem
ber 1 until October 1.
Previously, members of the But
chers' union and the Culinary al
liance had threatened to strike
September 1 rather than pay the
(2 examination fee stipulated in
the ordinance.
The 30 day interim will afford
time for a study of the feature of
the ordinance to which food hand
lers object, the council believed. A
meeting of representatives of the&a
groups, the health board and the
council was called for September
15.
HONEYMAN MAY
SUPPORT J. D.ROSS
Portland, Aug. 25 (IV-Mrs. Nan
Wood Honeyman, Oregon's repre
sentative in congress from the third
district, stood ready today to back
J. D. Ross of Seattle for adminis
trator at Bonneville dam If ha
proves the best man available after
"proper inquiry."
The congresswoman returned
from Washington by air, closing her
first session at the national capi
tal. "It makes no difference whether
the administrator Is an Oregon! an
or a Washingtonlan." she told in
terviewers, "as long as he has the
real interest of Bonneville at heart
and will administer the project for
the benefit of all the people."
Mrs. Honeyman, who said she
would not be a candidate for any of
fice other than the one she holds,
reported President Roosevelt's pop
ularity undamaged.
The president will not seek the
defeat of senators who opposed his
court bill, she said.
SCHENLErS
Hut Um MmU
im tfaia "Mark of
MtU"WoUk.r.
Golden Wedding
BOURBON
BLENDED STRAIGHT WHISKIES
A
""iJMH - fHC ENTHUSIAST'S
fii 4.t$L THE ENTHUSIAST'S
If you'd like to share the enthusiasm of
millions, try old Kentucky's "Double
Rich" straight Bourbon. You'll
be enthusiastic at its price too!
PINT 85l
QUART 1.55
A 90 proof Htktr 4th tfct JUV
f lmt. Mule rM Blot its
Coantrr by aiiirtr KaafitckrdU
tillen tht tood tU Ktnttrcty wt.
rm m u KtM fDQAAf uiulvvv sr
KCNTVCKY tTKAIOHT BOURBON V Hit KEY
Cope 19.37, Schenley Distributors, Ioc, N. Y.C
1 - vH'..Ni -1 ,-33
I
A LOT of water bis gone ver
iV tb dam since folks first
sang OLD OUAKER'S theme
song: "Thtrt'i A Barrel Of
' Quality In Every Bottle, But
It Doesn't Take A Barrel Of
Dougk-Re-Ml To Buy ft."
I pint80c
SCHENLErS
111 '1 I I I I f M.rk Ik. MH f. nri.
g J "MkMil"Whikw.
STRAIGHT BOJLlONi WHISKEY
Tukmb fir. Mn jfnwm H-t, r.H.I, .. OwrMb Dm
BRAND
L xr 7
yz 6
Tt - Ltl. ..!. .1
lATH WUQHl OWaneMj "first ffight"
waa at Kitty Hawk, N. C, in 1903. It leeted onty
12 seconda but it prormd that the power -driven
airplane was a sncceee I . . . Proof It what counts,
and Standard Oaaotine has been proved Unsur
passed by the 1937 report of the nationally
recognised automotive authority in America I
-toy a lanfijjuA!
4
9
mm
Unsurbossed
READ THIS CBRTOTCATIONt
'KmJu tt mwaWrf lwt coaduewa br the Comast
Board of the American Automobile Association on the
nine non-rjrsmtum cuolines leadina In adsa vol urn. in
she Pacific Coast ana subetanrim th stMsnwm of the
Standard Oil Contpmr of California that Scandanf
i is i
AMERICAN AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION
CONTEST BOARD, WASHINGTON, D. C
CSRTISIIB if S