Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, April 25, 1947, Page 11, Image 11

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    East Salem Club Members
Taking Part in Exhibits
East Salem, April 25 This is the banner week for all 4-H clubs
in East Salem school district with the best exhibits of health
posters, cooking and sewing all on display at the annual spring
show which is this year in thef"
Salem Chamber of Commerce
floral room. Middle Grove and
Auburn schools had achievement
day programs before the show,
but Swegle will have their pro
gram in May when the displays
taken to the show are returned.
All schools took part in the
parade as usual Friday and it
was a holiday for the four upper
grades where 4-H work is car
ried on. At the Middle Grove
achievement program held on
Community club night the fol
lowing members were presented:
Cleo Keppenger leading the op
ening with the Flag Salute, 4-H
pledge and yell; a primary play.
"Jimmy Germ," was given by
Pat Wilson, Marie Hammer, Bob
bie Muud, Denelow Kleen, Car
ol Parker, Bobbie Schafer, Don
ald Barnes and Lorelei Holman;
a song by William Werner, Don
and Jay Blankenship, Eldon
Beutler and Lewis Patterson.
; The intermediate play was
"The Trial of Black Fly," given
1 bv Donald Satter, Johnny Flow-
ijVers, Leonard Hammer, Larry
aKCeppenger, William Werner,
Larry Enslin, Marion Cage, Lew
w! is Patterson, Gordon Fromm,
Janice Scharf, Beverly Andrews
and Yvonne Goode. A demon
stration was given on the proper
treatment of shock by Jack
Wickoff, Jimmy Kuenze and
Marvin Cage. A Major Opera
tion, was presented by the home
makers club; parts were taken
by Betty Satter, Carol Kaufman,
Gloria Curtis, Janice Scharf,
Carol Hilficker and Magdalene
j Stahl.
! The calf club presented Har
1 old Koch in a piano solo and
i Lewis Patterson gave a reading.
J The cooking club gave a skit en
i titled . "Making Biscuits" with
j Gladys and Deloris Werner play-
ing the parts. The pig club
J showed the various parts of a i
pie and the explanation was giv
en by the leader, Donald Bas- !
sett, assisted by Wayne Goode.
The upper room presented
"When Polly Orders Lunch"
with parts taken by Betty Sat
ter, Shirley Page, Carol Lee
Kaufman, Gladys Werner, Carol
Hilficker, Pat Collins and Jo
anne Daniels. The program con
cluded with some group singing
by the school children. Displays
that had been judged previously
by the assistant county agent
were nut bread, bread and cook
ies and the winning posters.
The business meeting followed
with the election of the officers
for the community club year and
an item of business was to plan
on the serving of hot lunches at
school again next year. After
the program a country store was
visited which had been set up
in the basement and some of the
materials left from this year's
hot lunches were sold.
Husbands! Wives!
Want new Pep and Vim?
2 hounands of couples are weak, worn-out, ex
hausted solely because body lacks iron. Foi
new vim, vitality, try Ostrex Tonic Tablets.
Contains iron you, Ino, may need for pep; also
vitamin Bi. Get regular $1.00 size now only 8fcl
ror sale at all drug atoree everywhere.
Location for
School Offered
Stayton, April 24 Twenty
one acres of land for the site of
a union high school if formation
of a district ' is approved were
offered by the Stayton Chamber
of Commerce at a meeting of
nearly 100 persons representing
23 schools here Thursday night.
Interest is centered in the ap
proval of sufficient districts
within a nine-mile radius of
Stayton to make up a $3,000,000
valuation. The proposed terri
tory lies west of the hills of Mar
ion, east of the mountains of
Mehama and outside of the area
now served by Salem and Sil
verton high schools.
The offer was made through
Dale Crabtree, chairman of the
special committee of the Stay
ton Chamber of Commerce, who
also presented speakers on
school law and taxes, advan
tages of larger units and the
general formation of union high
school districts. If approved the
district would be the fourth of
its kind in Marion county, Crab
tree said. Marcel Van Driesche
was chairman of the evening
with Edmund Klecker third
member of the committee.
Speakers were Mrs. Agnes
Booth, Marion county school su
perintendent; J. M. Bennett,
Linn county school superintend
ent, and Frank B. Bennett, Sa
lem school superintendent, who
also stressed the return of the
Smith-Hughes department to the
community.
Practically all the schools in
the proposed district were rep
resented with the exception of
Turner and West Stayton, where
there was conflict with previ
ously scheduled community
meetings.
Telephone Bills Go
Unpaid During Strike
Portland, April 25 W) The
latest on the telephone strike
here is a campaign to keep bills
from being paid.
C. M. Bixler, president of the
United Telephone Employes un
ion, said it was successful, too
with 75 percent of the persons
turning back after pickets at the
telephone office asked them not
to pay bills while the strike con
tinues. But will their phones be dis
connected for non-payment?
Absolutely not, said officials
ot the Pacific Telephone and
Telegraph company, who added
they were too busy manning the
switchboards to do anything
about it.
JV-Jf VI"
! L ' i
Join the Friendly
PHILCO
Troubadour
'IN THESE FAVORITES
KSLM
Friday
1. "Stand Around the
Jimmy John."
2. "Rovin' Gambler."
3. "Black is the Col
or." 4. "Arrow Rock Jail."
Brought to vou weekly
H. L. STIFF
FURNITURE CO.
450 Court St. Ph. 9185
UAL Personnel Rides Big 300
Snell Note Flies to Stainback
Personnel at the local United Air Lines office wre in Portland
Thursday to take courtesy rides on the Mainlincr 300, a Douglas
DC-6, which' is the same type ot plane that will be used on the
flight to Hawaii and on the :
trans-continental flight fromlbert, Loren Boston, John Jan-
Ncw York to San Francisco
The plane, slated eventually
to be used east out of Portland
and on the west coast, came up
from San Francisco Thursday.
Personnel from the Salem and
the Portland offices were on an
hour flight up the Columbia
Gorge to acquaint them with
the new equipment.
Making the flight from the
Salem office were Manager Hal
Sweeney, Hal White, Larry Mc
Laughlin, Kay Hanks, Ed Lam-
zen, Cliff Amend, bantord Kent
and Rudy Stinnett.
Personal greetings from Gov.
Earl Snell of Oregon to Gov
Ingram M. Stainback of Hawaii
today were winging their way
across the Pacific on a United
Air Lines pre-inaugural flight
between California and Hono
lulu. W. A. Patterson, United pres
ident aboard the flight, is car
rying Governor Snell's letter
and will present it to Governor
'Stainback In person upon arrlv-! Capital Journal, Salem, Orcein, Friclav. April 2n, 1947 It
;u. i ne mp is oeing mane in
one of United's new four-engin-cd
Mainlincr 300s which will be
placed in regular daily sched
ules between San Francisco and
Honolulu May 1.
Following is the text of Gov
ernor Snell's message to Gover
nor Stainback:
"With the inauguration of
United Air Lines service from
the mainland to Hawaii, our
state of Oregon is brought clos
er to your beautiful islands, giv
ing us for the first time a one
carrier, daily transportation
service. It is my earnest hope
jlliat this new facility for com
jmerce and intercourse will bring
us closer in ncighborliness,
friendship and prosperity.
"Please accept greetings to
the people of the territory of
Hawaii from the people of Ore
gon, and my warmest personal
greetings to you."
TOO WiAKTO
DO ANYTHING
On 'CERTAIN DAYS' Of Month?
This great medicine Is famous to
re Hove pit in fill d 1st teas nnd tired,
nervous, Irritable feelings, of such
days when due to female func
tional monthlv disturbances!
IY0IA . PIHKHAMS SIS
The Right Life
For You
Br 1. R. WlUetl
ef the Capita! Drat Store
Nature has provided the hu
man system with a marvelously
intricate and beautifully coordin
ated set of organs, glands, blood
stream, bone and muscle. When
Nature's simple laws are heed
ed, these work together for
health, strength and intelligence.
Undue strain, insufficient diet
and rest, too strenuous exercise,
or too little exercise, may impair
this structure. Then, lassitude,
loss of energy, often loss of
health, result.
Let the doctor determine what
is needed to keep your good
health intact. Should it fail be
fore you consult him, let him
advise what must be done to
correct and to restore health and
energy.
Trust a good druggist to pro
perly compound medication or
dered by the doctor.
Thin U the 43th nf a serifs nt Erfllnrial
Advertisements aupearlnr in . the Capital
Journal each Friday.
Willett's
Capital Drug Store
Cor. State A Liberty Ph. 3118
I
BUILD YOUR HOME
Through KEITH BROWN
Consult
KEITH BROWN
For good ideas
about small homes,
for expert advice
on
building problems
Rely on KEITH BROWN
for lumber, millwork,
glazing, builder s hard
ware, electrical supplies
i for all the materials
you need in building or
remodeling.
KNOTTY PINE PANELING We've just received a
shipment of this popular paneling, to attractive in every ,
room of your house. Order now.
Screen Doors, sizes 2' 8" x 6' 8" x 1 Vb" and 3' 0" x
6' 8" x 1 '".
Vertical Grain Beveled Siding 6 in. B & Btr. Brick, No.
' 1 common $40.00 Per M.
Aluminum Roofing, Corrugated & V-Krimp, 6 to 12 ft.
lengths.
SMITHWICK
Concrete or
Pumice Building
Blocks
Adaptable material, fireproof
and economical that lends it
self equally well to construc
tion of basements, founda
tions, retaining walls, indus
trial and commercial build
ings, dwelling houses, or farm
buildings.
keith brdwn
""Plumber yard
mONT AND COURT STS PHONE 9161
Lumber - Millwork -Glazing . Hardware Paints
Wake up to MisTLEi...in your coffee !
mi
I
Smooth and thick as country cream
ANOTHER CARLOAD!
ORANGES!
FACTORY
PACKED
CASE $3.65
Vt Case $1.98
8 Dozen $1.00
Dozen 15c
Don't Miss This Money-Saving Opportunity
to Buy at Wholesale Prices!
SAVING CENTER
At the Foot
of the Bridge
WEST SALEM
Vi Mile North
of the Underpass
SALEM
! Use Capital Journal Want Ads. They Will Satisfy Your Needs.
; i. rniir Future
.tarn ssa - s uwm bw m
urn 'wrnw ' mm
JUST pause a moment on any corner
of the smartest street in town.
Wait till you see this gleaming grille
bearing down on you these long
fender lines sweeping past this trim
rear bumper flashing its farewell.
That's not just the new '47 Buick
you're seeing, but the tip-off on tomor
row as far as car styling is concerned.
Here's the long, low, sweeping look
designers even now are striving to
equal.
Here's the broad beam that tells of
plenty-room, the proud bearing that
spells power and ability and steady
road-wise going.
We're not saying you'll match this
flashing .action elsewhere Buick's
frugal Fireball combustion principle
Tuna In HENRY I. TAYIOR, Mutual Network, Mondoyi and Fridoyi
and Accurite cylinder finish give us
pretty much of a corner on that.
And not everywhere will you find the
fluid stride, the ever-easy comfort of
soft, BuiCoil springing on all four
wheels. Only Buick, after all, can be
all a Buick is.
But here's the way the smartest cars
will dress themselves for a long
while to come. Here's a high-styled
high stepper that will keep you among
the first-in-fashion for years and
years.
That being so why hesitate? There's
no smarter step you can take to make
your dollar count and cut your wait
ing to the minimum than to get your
order in now.
f
ONLY BUICK HAS ALL THESE Shift Fe47VZ S
AIRFOIL FINDERS
FIREBALL POWER -
from valve-in-head straight,
eight engines in two sizes.
BUfCOfl SPRINGING -
Buick-developed all-coil spring,
ing for perpetual smoothness
and "panthergait" ride.
fliteweight pistons
silent zone body mountings
perm-firm steerino
broadrim wheels
FULL-LENGTH TORQUE-TUBE DRIVE -protects
moving porti, gives steadiness in
traveling.
STEPON PARKING BRAKE
DEEPFLEX SEAT CUSHIONS
CURL-AROUND BUMPERS
ACCURITE CYLINDER
BORING smoothness from
the slort and an engine that
"stays young."
NINE SMART MODELS
BODY BY FISHER
. i -,i-
Otto J. Wilson Company
.388 N. Commercial St. Phone 9961
Salem, Oregon
V