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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1939)
Eight Tht Copital Journal, Salem, Oregon Wednesday, June 21, 1939 Quelle Is Offered as One of Coast 's Finest Tomorrow evening, beginning at 6 o'clock and contin ulna until closing time. The Quelle restaurant will be form ally presented to the citizens of Salem and vicinity as one of the linen placet or its sino any the Pacific cout. The restaurant, which U owned by Frank H. Chatas and Dr. R. J. rlicol. waa opened (our and a half jeare ago and only re cently was closed (or remodeling that called (or recom miction throughout. The grand opening tomorrow evening will feature a ipeclal eight coune dinner to be served through out the evening, beginning at 6:30. A special program of music will be presented by a string orchestra. Vis itors to the Queue during the even ing hours will be Invited to Inspect the entire plant. Employes will be 32 Portlanders To Visit Salem On Thursday Thirty -two Junketing business and professional men from Port land, traveling by chartered bus, will be given a hearty welcome when they arrive In Salem tomor row at 11 o'clock. The Portland party will be met at North Salem viaduct by a dele gation of prominent Salem men . from the Chamber of Commerce and other organisations. Including Mayor W. w. Chadwlck and President T. A. Wlndlshar of the Chamber of Commerce. Before coming on into town they will visit the nearby Valley Pack- lng company and inspect the plant. Immediately thereafter they will be taken to the Marlon hotel where they will be guests at the weekly Lions lunch. The next visit will be to the Ore gon Pulp tt Paper company and the Reed Murdoch packing plant, then the new state capltol and the man ufacturing plant of the Eyerljr Air craft company. The concluding visit will be to the Salem brewery. The Portland delegation will be captained by Edward N. Welnbaum, manager of the trade and com merce department of the Portland Chamber of Commerce. The complete list of the Portland Junketeers follows: F. W. Arlaa. praaldent and naoasar ef Am. Campbell oault. Inc.; B. r. Bal- Itr, chief anatnacr. oparaUns dcparlmtnt. Pacific Power St Llerit eompanr; Leo H. sarun, aecretarr-ireaaurer waanami a Co., Inc.; H. E. Brown, manaaer McKea. Ion Si Robbtna, Inc.: O. Clerlco. manaaar Mallorr hotel! Walter L. J. Davlea, Vict- pteaiaent united Btatei national Bank: Jack Domnlaee, manaaer of Oohrmann Hotel Supply company; K. O. Bldrldae, owner and manaaer of Kldrldaa rood Balea. Inc.: Ben Ettelaon, vtce-prealdent of U. Seller eompanr: W. H. Francti. aialatant aeneral frelaht aaent Southern Paeltlc eotnpanr: A. U Oreenwalt, man aaer for Dun At Bradatreet, Inc.; Oeoraa Greenwood, manaaer of new buslneia de partment. Bank of California; Don Hen- derton, prealdent of Service Bronaa A, Braaa Worka. Inc.; I. X. Hervln. dlatrlct manaaer lor Metropolitan Lira Inaur anea company; 8. A. Humphrey. ownM of Candy Produeta company; B. W. John eon, executive vlce-prealdent and saneral manaaer or the adjustment bureau. W. c. Kaley, aaalitant vlce-prealdent. Flrat National bank: J. B. Kllmore, pur- cnaains aaent lor racmo rower m Llaht company; A. O. Leecn, department man aaer for Portland Oaa At coke company: Z. W. Moaner, dlatrlct paaaenaer aaent. Pennaylvanla Railroad company; Charlea w. oaten, 334 Nortbweat Olltan atreet; Clarence D. Porter, vlce-prealdent and manaaer. Fidelity St Depoolt company of Maryland: Xd RuaaeU. manaaer for Raa muaaen At Co.: Ualle M. Scott, chairman of board of Portland Chamber of Com merce: Vernon Scott, prealdent of Packer Scott company: Paul T. Shaw, prealdent or Shaw Buralcal company: c. L. Bhorno, vlce-prealdent and manaaer of Blake Moffltt Si Towne: Idward P. Sinclair' manaaer for D. N. and S. Walter com pany; Claude Snow, prealdent of Bnow'a Ineectlelde company; Paul Stelnmeta. owner of Portland Cutlery company; R. C. Stratford, member of Wbltcomb. Burn. Blratford At Co.: Kdward N. Welnbaum, manaaer of trade and commerce depart ment, Portland chamber of Commerce. Santiam Rebekahs Name New Officers Mill City Election of offloers was held at the regular meeting of the Santlam Rebekah lodge. Those elected were Mrs. W. J. Robinson, noble grand; Mrs. Crlssle Hender son, vice-grand; Mrs. Otto Oeert sen, secretary, and Mrs. Gertrude Msson, treasurer. The report on Grand lodge was given by Mrs. Mabel Schroeder and Mrs. Blanche Syverson. Visitors from the Lyons lodge were Mrs. Hazel Lewis, Mrs. Lois Comfort. Mrs. Rosa Berry, Mrs. Mildred Carr, Mrs. Theresa Crabtree and Mrs. Elizabeth Westenhouse. A committee for the June birth days was appointed. Following the business session, an evening of cards and a no-host lunch were held. on hand In all parts of the building to answer questions about new equipment and special features of the restaurant. Music for the evening will be supplied by a string group featur ing prominent local musicians. Brad Collins, pianist, will direct assisted by Mary Headrlck, violin; Charles Ned Vornlk, violin, and Olen Burrlght, bass. Beet Equipment Featured The new Quelle features the very latest In restaurant equipment from an a 11 -electric kitchen to prepare food to the most modern methods of serving It to the public. Decorated , the ' to La to In the modern mode of styling, new restaurant offers the utmost In customer comfort and conven lence, In addition to an elite fountain service and booths that will accom modate M persons at a single serv lng. The restaurant will also tea. ture a special dining room service catering to parties and banquets. The new dining rooms are equipped to handle small parties of 10 or to banquets of 300 persons. Mr. Cristas Is s restauranteur many years' experience, first start ing out In this business in Belolt, Wis, where he owned and operated two restaurants. From Belolt migrated to the West and opened two places In Walla Walla, only move a few years later to Orande, In eastern Oregon, to open still another cafe. This move was followed In a short tune to Pendle ton where he ultimately owned two more restaurants. Same Name Used It wss from Pendleton that he moved to Salem In 1935 to establish his business In Its present location. In all his moves Mr. Chataa has been consistent In one respect each of his restaurants has been called The Quelle. In Salem he dl vlded his business with Dr. R. Nlcol, former owner of the Holly. wood theater, who has been his business partner since coming Salem. According to Mr. Chataa, the re modeling of the local restaurant was not a sudden move. Increas lng business, together with the In creasing demand In the city for place where banquets for a large number of persons could be held finally brought about the transition. "In making this move, It was my sole aim to give Salem the finest restaurant It was possible to pro. vide," Mr, Chataa said. Staff Growa Rapidly That The Quelle has progressed in Its four years In Salem Is borne out In Its growth. When It was first opened the staff consisted of five employes. Including the pro prietor. Todsy, the staff boasts 23, exclusive of Mr. Chataa. The pres. ent staff Is composed of Fay Buck num. hostess; Agnes Cook, cashier Harry Chadboume. fountain mana ger; Vlona Moberg, Alice Mldwood, una Toney, Rose Sommer, Edith Wellhausen, Lois Russel, Esther Vehrs, Dorothy Moore, Lucy Wind hole, Betty Jackson and Mary Head, restaurant and dining room staff; Oust Chataa, chef; William Greg ory, assistant chef; Bradley Blank- enshlp. Earl Hull, Ethel Chatas, Don Fields, William Byers, John Obrlcht and Herman Johnsrud kitchen staff. The remodeling of the building waa done through local agencies, Leo Johnson Installed all electrl cal equipment and lighting fixtures; Woodry Furniture, linoleum; Skewls and Judson, plumbing; Carl Arm priest, sheetmetal work; Harold Dunsmoor, interior decorating; Cas par and Cutler, ventilation and heating systems. The heavy duty kitchen equipment and fountain material was obtained through firms In Portland. The Hszel Dell Dairy was awarded the contract to supply the restaurant with all dairy produeta dally, Rosedale District Names Bert Hamilton Rosedale School election ' held Monday night at the Rosedale schoolhouse. Bert Hamilton was elected director and Mrs. Lesta Bates clerk. Ed Harmon of Nampa. Idaho, preached at Rosedale Friends church Sunday morning and all eve ning services were dismissed en ac count of the yearly meeting at New. berg. Ormal Trick was home Sunday from Forest Grove to attend atie Methodist conference. Congratulations to The Quelle on the dedication of its beautiful new dining rooms and all-electric kitchen All Electrical Work installed by LEO H. JOHNSON Electrical Contractor 525 Edgewater Phone 9111 WIRING . REPAIRING . FIXTURES ef it - r ft v. Saf rnifcii ' I' ill nTaal ' as aaasasaasssassssssa Interior of the new Quelle restaurant showing the modern styling of all equipment. In addition to the fountain and booth service shown here, a series of special dining rooms are provided In the rear of the cafe. Children Capable of Selecting Own Diet Montreal, June 21 (U.R) Dr. Clara M. Davis, of Winnet- ka, 111., told the Canadian medical association today that young children are perfectly capable of choosing; their own diets ana thriving on them. Her paper on the "Results of the Self- selection of Diets by Infants," was based on a six year study of 15 chUdren, starting with the age of weaning, who were allowed to choose their own diets. "All the children proved able to manage their own menus; all had hearty appetities, and all throve, Dr. Davis said. "Constipation was unknown among them, and lxs lives never were needed. During the six yesrs no serious illness oc curred among the children.1 For the experiments, large trays of foods were placed before the children and they were permitted to eat what they liked. Dr. Davis said the children chose their food at random, and there was not the slightest evidence of choice directed by "Instinct." They tried nearly all articles on the list, and within a few days they began de veloping definite tastes and reach ed eagerly for some foods and neg lected others. Some of the children were In poor condition, four being under- nouished and underweight and five having rickets, when taken for the experiments, but within a "reason able time" the nutrition of all came up to optimal standards. Dr. Davis said. All cases of rickets healed in approximately the same length of time, although one of the children suffering from them was allowed to take cod liver oil when he chose and took about two ounces of It. Dr. Davis said the average daily calories In the diets selected by the the chUdren during each six months' period were in every In stance found to be within the lim its set by scientific nutritional standards for the Individual's age. This, she said, suggested "the ex istence of some Innate automatic mechanism. In which appetite Is an important factor, which controls the result In a satisfactory way, despite the great differences In the comp onent of the diets as selected by the children." Marshall Hopes To Scale Doonerak Fairbanks, Alaska. June 31 VPi On an expedition to challenge on foot the loftiest peak in Arctic America, Bob Marshall, chief of the division of recreation and land use In the U. S. forest service, arrived here by airplane today from Wash' ington. D. C, en route to pick up two hardy sourdough "mushers." Marshall, with Jess Allen and Kenneth Harvey, the sourdoughs. will make a 75-mlle pack train trip and then attempt to scale 10,000- foot Mt. Doonerak, which never has been conquered by man. The peak, in the Endicott range, is so steep that scarcely any snow clings to its precipitous slopes. Marshall Is a familiar figure to the Alaskan scene, having written Arctic Village." a story dealing with Eskimo life. Historic Mural Takes Place in State House A huge mural depicting the arrival of the news at Salem that Oregon had been admitted to the union was mounted in the senate of the new state capitol today. Frank H. Schwarz, new York artist wno did the latest Artillery Roars From Guard Camps Camp Clatsop, June 31 (jF) Twelve-inch mortars and 10-inch rifles echoed up and down the coast line near Fort Stevens yesterdsy as units of the 249th field artillery pep pered a target towed In the Colum bia river by a tug. The squatty mortars expelled 900- pound projectiles while the big rifles threw 550-pound bullets. The six-Inch guns spoke at Fort Canby on the Columbia's north shore, across from Fort Stevens, other coast artillery units drilled. Battery A, Albany coast artillery unit, drew warm praise for firing eight record shots with the mortars onto the target 9000 yards away. Battery D from Klamath Falls displayed exceptional accuracy with the 10-Inch rifles although it was slightly over the time allowance. The target was approximately eight miles away. Second hand clothing from Am erica Is to be sold in East Africa. The Dunsmoors Congratulate The Quelle It was our privilege to do the painting and decor ating of Salem's finest restaurant. Your Painting Problems Are Our Business Harold Dunsmoor PAINT CONTRACTOR 1115 Shipping St. "Five Generations ef Painters . Maybe We Painted the Mayflower" painting and two of the four murals in the rotunda of the capltol, came here from the east to supervise the mounting. The mural, which is mounted on a curved background above the pres. ldent's platform, Is domlnantly grey with overtones of blue, green and la. vender, to harmonize with the dark wood panelling of the room. The scene shows Steffln Senter. young Oregon City horseman, who had splashed overland from Oregon City with the news of admission, ar riving in Salem after a 30-hour ride on March 10, 1859, The pioneers shown on the panel seem only lethargic In their Interest in the news. Schwarz said his own researches, Indicated the people of Salem, Incensed when an earlier ap plication had been turned down were not avid In their Interest. The painting was laid before the old Bennett House, leading hostelry of the dsy. Many pioneers are stand ing around in groups and Senter, the courier. Is reading from a writ ten dispatch. Women, dressed In the costume of the era, show little more Interest than the men. Schwarz said he had made no ef fort at portraiture In his work, but tnai several or the men represented were painted with the Idea of lndl vldual pioneers In mind. Included in these are General Joseph Lane and Jesse Applegate, men who were be lieved to be In Salem the day the news arrived. Second of the two legislative murals, to be mounted over the speaker's roster In the house of rep resentatives, was In Salem but was not to be unveiled until the arrival of Its artist, Barry Faulkner, who divided the painting assignment with Schwarz. Faulkner Is due here the first of next week. Posses Continue Search for Outlaw Hayward, Wis., June 31 OP) A re lentless search for Ray Olson, elu sive fugitive who killed two depu ties, spread into a second northern Wisconsin county today after an armed and heavily bearded man answering his description was seen near Bruce, about 30 miles south of here. Possemen, who for five days have pursued Olson, divided their forces and enacted a campaign designed to prevent the 30-year-old ex-con- Wet from replenishing his food sup ply. While a group of volunteers and deputies under Sheriff Ellsworth Wilson guarded all roads In nor thern Rusk county and searched the countryside near Bruce, a second army of possemen under Sheriff George Seeheuter of Sawyer county continued systematically to comb the Moose lake area near here where the fugitive broke Into a store Mon day and stole food. Mexico Is trying to induce the world to smoke Mexican cigarettes. Sally Rand Becomes Business Executive San Francisco, June 20 (U.R) Meet Sally Rand, the busi ness executive, who spends her days worrying about meeting the payroll and complying with social security laws and her nignis figuring out ways oi increas- lng her business. Occasionally Miss Rand takes day off to address a woman's club or a businessmen's convention, and, of rourse, she still has to Inject personal touch Into "Sally Rand's Nude Ranch" at the Golden Gale International Exposition. But, for the most part, Miss Rand worka from 13 to li hours a day at being a business executive. She lsnt the girl that Hickory County, Mo., knew, nor the fan dancer that the Chicago fair visitors went crazy a- oous. She personally hires the 13S em. ployes she has at her "Nude Ranch' and "Miss America," both of which are Incorporated. The "Miss Amer ica show. Incidentally. Is a niaht ciud extravaganza that would do justice to a Billy Rose or a Flo Zleg feld. In 1933 Miss Rand waa broke and slightly hungry. She got her a set of fans and the rest Is history that is, until her current role of discus. sutg social and economic problems ana or being one of the most Im portant persons connected with the San Francisco Exposition. Perhaps the most Important con sideration now that Miss Rand has become a business executive Is whether she makes money, "Yes," she said, "plenty, I paid off my original Investment within the first three weeks of the fair. Since then, even with $3,000 weekly over head, there has been plenty of profit." As for Miss Rand's diversion "I haven't any. I get an average of six hours sleep and I spend all my waking hours at work, either directing my shows at the fair or at the night club. Whenever I can I accept Invitations to make speech es." But there must be someone ro mantic in her life; perhaps she may even be thinking about getting married. never,- she said. "I was en- gsged once. I'm going to go on be ing a bachelor girl." (Continued from Page 5) Scarth until Wednesday of next week In order to permit those who wish to attend the Salem luncheon at the Marlon hotel Monday In com pliment to Mrs. James Morris of Blsmark, N. D., auxiliary national president. a a Friends are happy to learn that N, o. Wallace, who has been con fined to the Salem Oeneral hospital for some time, was moved to his home at the Royal Court Tuesday, a a a Talbot Mr. and Mrs. KelUi Allen were hosts at a family dinner Sun day honoring Miss Myra Robinson of Berkeley, Calif., who Is visiting relatives In this district. Covers wen placed for the honor guest, Miss Ro binson, Mrs. E. B. Knight and son, Jack, of Jefferson, Mrs. Helen Doty of Salem, Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Lena burg and Dennis of Dayton, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Doty, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Cole, Marjorle, Robert, Donald and Oaynell, Ralph and Jay Brown ot the Talbot district, and the hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Allen and two children. African Nazis have taken con trol of German schools In Johannesburg. Our Congratulations to The Quelle It was a pleasure to aid In the construction of Salem's most beautiful restaurant by Installing: All the Linoleum Floor Covering: Let Us Figure Your Floor Covering Job Woodry Furniture Co. FLOOR COVERING SPECIALISTS 474 S. Commercial St Phone 6414 Plans were completed for the en tertainment of the Marlon county assembly Sunday, June 35, at the annual picnic at Hazel Oreen park meeting In the rooms of the park dance hall at 11 o'clock In the fore noon. An all day quilting will be given during next week to complete a quilt partly finished. The past presidents' club will defer its trip to Philo math to be guestt of Mrs. James A. - YOU ARE TO BE HIGHLY COMMENDED FOR GIVING SALEM ONE OP THE FINEST RESTAURANTS IN THE NORTHWEST. IglEAVER CABINET WCRIKg t efemmvsXeiAi, IXTU I IF Hazel Dell Dairy Congratulates The Quelle SALEMS' HOME OF THE FINEST OF FINE FOODS Consistent In its policy to use and serve only the best in foods, The Quelle management selected HAZEL DELL DAIRY PRODUCTS EXCLUSIVELY In your own home, where you insist on the best, and yet the most economical, you will find HAZEL DELL PRODUCTS will meet all your demands for service at your door Phone 9622 or 22F21 Salem's Most Beautiful Restaurant 440 State St. Phone 5016 for Reservations yran d QDenina The. The Management Invites you to enjoy this most modern of fine places to dine. Grand Opening Dinner JAenu. Crab , , Fruit , : Sweet Pickles . , , Celery , Tomato Jules Ripe Olives CHOICE OF WINES COCKTAIL: Shrimp . RELISH SOUP: Cream of Tomato SALAD: Fresh Combination Vegetable Salad ENTREES: Fillet Mlgnon . . . Mushroom Sauce . . , Virginia Baked Ham . , . Raisin Sauce, . . Roast Young Oregon Turkey . . . Oyster Dressing , . . Whole Kernel Corn . . . Baked Potatoes . . , quelle Special Rolls DESSERT: Pumpkin . '. . Fresh Apple Pie . . . Jello with Whipped Cream Fresh Strawberry Sundae . . . Pineapple or Orange Sherbet CHOICE OF BEVERAGES 1.00 Musie Dinner Served 6:30 to 10:00 P. M.