10 Capital Journal. Salem. Oregon, Friday, June 10, 1949 ? YVi.W'mt -"-r, IT ..I ; East Salem-Middle i sWa '.lrV.l VVi MWQWTS Grove. Committeeman i I ' i-ikJA Tl' A " rW MrWK.feWlll Li llotlen.. Gordon r : k3"V N W 'TCl ' ".A I Wikoff. Jr.. Leonard H Wrt'i: .-II ' - WTIKyrilOl .nd ...irtant scoutmaster I mfei:K:f fly JPmiM . ink. , . . i TV..&)Mtf smtmi m m iiiAI rim n m;,Kmmmff I East Salem Lads Attend Boy Camporee on Santiam Grove Boy Scout troop 42 was well repre- poree thii past week end at the old boy the North Santiam river above Taylor'i Cleo Keppinger accompanied the follow- s, vlarvin C. Cage, Jerry Rawlins. Del- ronim Jack Hammer Don- Id Basett. Furnlsmn irans- nnriatlnn were committeemen iHubert Aspinwall, John li.nnen and Jack Wikoff. troop received second in camp ing. . .... An active numun . ""-,boy said he slammed shut the Middle Grove troop. "joo1 of n unuwd jce box . ing deaths of three other chil- Van The Shut Ice-Box Dnor Killina 3 Walnut Ridge. Ark.. June B A The Arkansas state police reported today a 10-year-old to w-' m' ----- Vt". jf , ,f;f rr ;l"5 3 m CT?rrd v. tersnn had the misioriunr seriously iniure his knee in a ball game which his troop was olavine with Hazel Green boys on the Central Howell ball field He was taken to the hosnital where several stitches were needed and it will be several weeks before he will be active with his troop again. Barbara Van Loh. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Van Loh of Swede community is in the Sa lem General hospital this week having undergone a soinal op eration on Monday. Mrs. Jack Lindeman was host ess for the bi-monthly meeting of the Merry-go-round club at her Hollywood drive home on Thursday night. Mrs. Clayton Gibh was the honored guest for a surprise shower. Tn attendance were Mr. Wilson "lies. Mrs. V M. La Due. Mrs. H-'en Laudie Mrs. Paul Rryam. Mrs. R. M. Proudfit. Mrs. Walter Fisher. Mrs. Pex Peffer. Mrs. Sam Pay Md. Mrs. Hirold Holler. Mrs. Melvin La Due. Mrs. Gordon Beecroft. Mrs. Oscar Foreard Mrs. Ernest Crum and the hon- lest. For the program Mrs. Peffer gave an ti trated lesson In corsage mak- dren. Police Lt. H. R. Peterson iden tified the boy as James (Biiddyl Chesser, uncle of one of the vic tims. The police officer quoted James as saying the children were playing "I-spy." when all three climbed into the old-fashioned wooden box last Friday Then. Peterson continued, the boy related: He shut the door of the box end vas unable to get it onen "My mother called me then to go to the store. I was scared I ran home and went to the store. Then I forgot." The victims were James Del bert Chastain, two, and Joyce Ann Chestain, nine, children of Mr and Mrs. Ed Chastain and Shirley Ann Ramsey, six, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ramsey. Young Chesser was an uncle of the Ramsey girl. The old Ice box was at the home of the Chastain children's parents In a farm community rear Walnut Ridge. The other children lived nearby. Mrs. Chas'ain discovered the children in the box when she returned home from work in the cotton fields. Her son and the Ramsey girl were dead of suffocation. Joyce Ann Chastain died early Satur day. Chesser was held in custody temporarily. Peterson said he doubted there'd be any charges. "He's too young to do any thing with even if it had been oeliberate and I don't believe it was," Peterson said. club. He will succeed Burleigh Cash. Otners named were Keith Rhodes, first vice - president; Dale Weeks, second vice-president; George Kingan, secretary: Vern Nelson, treasurer; Frank Wells, tail twister; Roy Long, lion tamer; and Jack Brande and Ted Rodman, directors. The new officers will be Installed June 29. Lebanon Lions Name William Thomas Prexy Lebanon William Thomas. Lebanon attorney, was elected president of the Lebanon Lions KEEP PESTS OUTDOORS Here Is best assurance of summer-long comfort Screen Doors for making indoors airily livable! Built to stand up. year after year, in service. Designed to admit plentiful air and light while barring the wav to winged pests! Pric ed low enough to let you . replace old, warped screens, easily, economically. SALEM WOODWORKING CO. mSCroM Ph.3-3953 r I I Why Suffer Any Longer Whvn ai.tr ln aw out Cblntut 'rmnliu A maun uccw tot MU 'r n China Hp mitter ith vhi1 tllmenu toil ar fniet4 4uordr in ui ti neap lunia Uer Ktdniy ju. lonMlpfction mctr dlabte rhf umailim tall and bladder, favet stm utaia eemoiftiiiu. CHARLIE CHAN CHINKHK Rill CO. nfflt Hnart U Tttr and Hat Only tM N Camracrctal iii Spacious Sodavlile Spring House Sodaville, smallest - incorporated municipality in Linn county and among the smaller In the nation, raised funds to complete this spacious spring house in the 1890s. Pioneers attributed great thera- ,n putic power to the sodium in Sodaville's mineral water. Below, Willamette valley folks in horse and buggy decades ,j0 came to Sodaville to enjoy the soda water. Many remained In camp throughout the summer. Shown is a band concert about to start at the spring house sometime in the 1880s. Sodaville Quietly Dreams Of Its Illustrious Past By BEN MAXWELL Like the mineral spring that bubbles eternal within its cor "1' porate limits Sodaville lives on. For decades this Incorporated hamlet, nestled In the timbered foothills of Linn county only a few miles southeast of Lebanon has lived on dreaming of its Illustrious past and vaguely of a it hoped might1 .-. grandeur that some day come. With an official population of less than a hundred lt Is the " smallest incorporated hamlet In o Linn county and one of the mailer in the entire nation. On December 5, 1932, Soda " vHle held an election to settle u seething controversy about maintenance of its municipal T atatus. By a vote of 2 to 22 from a total population of 77 Its '! corporate status was sustained. ' Total valuation for the city of Sodaville was then $13,000 and - lh normal municipal tax amounted to $200. M '' Justification for Sodaville's existence then and now Is the ' Invigorating spring of mineral bring all their camping supplies from home. During the IROOs a nominal sum was raised for construction qf a spring house though a num ber of years elapsed before The present structure so distinctly dated in respect to architecture could be completed. But 1 1 stands today on a sylvan slope like an ancient shrine to remind the passerby that this commun ity, then poor and never rich, regarded Its natural benefaction wth sufficient esteem to house it properly. , Attend Rose Festival HuhbardMrs. L. V. Mullins. of Eureka, Calif., visited her son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Don ter bubbling near the center j Mullins this week and attended cf the municipality. Ruben '..! Coyle discovered thia spring in 1848 while rounding up stray J. oxen. Animals, both wild and domesticated, liked the mineral water as did Coyle and his pio Beer friends who aampled it. '. An Inscription on a atone placed In ll)2 and dedicated to ,, tht memory of Thomas L. " Summers states he was the J! donor of the spring and Its site U the public May 4, 1871. Un- like many other Oregon mln n eral springs (state heritages by J, law and forfeited to private ex " plnitation by Indifferent public " officials) Sodaville spring and a its surrounding park has been freely available to all for 78 ' years. It Is now owned and maintained by tht highway de- partment. J, Pioneers attributed diverse eurallve properties to this min ,t eral water so rich In sodium. In the long ago hundreds pitched their tents and spent their vaca- tions there In the leisurely horse M and buggy decades Marion and s Linn atlas for 1878 railed the I place Summer Soda, perhaps be cause the campground was J white with tents during July v and August. The place was pnr frayed as beautiful and the in H vigorating and theraputic water 9 as salubrious. They came, the w Atlas asserted, "to enloy the " aoda and social intercourse." ; ... U Seventy years ago there was a good hotel at Sodaville, the a Fountain house operated by D - P Foot, Dtigger'a restaurant and 5 J. Cole's general store for the JJ benefit of those who forgot to the Rose Festival in Portland. Broadcast on Rent Control Removal of rent controls whenever justified under newi provisions of the. 1949 rent act will be dirussed by Ward Cox, western regional housing ex oeriitflr. In a broadcast over the National Broadcasting Compa ny! western network at 11:15 p.m. DST, Friday June lu, neard locally over KGW, Portland. Cox. head of Federal rent control throughout the west, will speak on "Decontrol and Your Community". He will explain "local opinion" provisions of the rent act, and give a round up of the latest news on uch decontrol action in the west. The broadcast will be the sec ond in a series over NBC by Regional Housing Expediter Cox on the general subject. "Your Rent Problem'. During: dan the series. Cox will answer ques-1 H tions received from many of the 2.500.000 western landlords and tenants on what is controlled and what isn't, what has been recontrolled under the new law. how ceiling rents are set, how landlords obtain adjustments in their rents and what the rights of tenants are. E. C. Clay, Salem area rent representative, says the broad cast should clear up many ques tions over what is required for a community to qualify for re moval of controls. House guest thl week in the home of Mr. anH Mrs. .lack Wik nff In Middle Oove community , Mrs. Agnes Oant of Covina, Calif. Contain and Mrs. Clavton Dalke anH their two daughters are spending his 30 day fur lough visiting in the home of his n?rents, Mr. and Mrs. Menno Dslke on East Garden road and with the families' of his sisters. Mrs. Orover Welty and Mrs. Lu Singer. Great Britain to Sell Arms to Arabs London June 10 Inform ed sources said today Britain is ready to sell small arms and ammunition to Arab nations for internal security purposes. The sources said the step was being taken after consultation with Dr. Ralph Bunche, United Nations mediator for Palestine They said such sales of small quantities of arms would not vi olate the Middle East arms em bargo. Britain has arms contracts with Egypt, Iraq and Trans-Jor- "Vince's Electric" Vacuum Cleaner SALES SERVICE I REPAIRS RENTALS On All Types Household or Commercial Also Waxers ALL WORK FULLY GUARANTEED Free Pirk-l'p and Delivery PHONE 3-9239 SCHENLEY FOR THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE! "DAFFY AUCTION AST V SSSli3SSSCHENLEY because it gives you OLDER W HISKIES Rare 0.0 "! O year old whiskies, skillfully blended with pre-war quality grain neutral spirits, make Schenley richer and finer always RARF Rl FNDFn WHKkTY Wf STiWT WWSKifS in this rTOPUCT f S nunc, ounulu wniarvtT v(.soit MOf oto mm stt.ht hhiskcy .swgik Ntmmi sniT$. ioh simiGHT whiskey 5 rfs 010. ?i stif.nT whiskey s years 010 4 STRAIGHT WKISKIY TIMS 0 D. COfl. 1941 JChUUY 0ISTIBUT0(tS,INC. N.V.C FERTILIZERS NOW AVAILABLE AMMONIUM NITRATE SULPHATE OF AMMONIA NITRATE OF SODA CYANAMID 16-20 AMMO-PHOS. 11-48 AMMO-PHOS. Woodburn Feed & Supply Co. Phone M l 47 Woodburn If you own a Dodge Car or Dodge Truck SAVE $63.05 If you own a Plymouth Car SAVE $60.00 Get your car or truck rady now for summer driving end vacation tripi at special low prices. We will install brand new factory built engine (not a rebuilt job) on Dodge and Plymouth cars (1935 to 1949) or Dodge trucks, V2, V ond 1 ton (1935 to 1949). Installation of engine and all necessary parts includes: Install new engine assembly; completely rebuild carburetor; new distributor points and condensor: new radiator hoses;, new crankshaft drive pulley; new oil filter; new oil; all gaskets and seals to complete installation. Regular price, Dodge cars and trucks 352.05 Special price complete - - - - - 289.00 Regular price, Plymouth cars - 329.50. Special price complete ----- 269.50 TERMS ON APPROVED CREDIT AS LONG AS A YEAR TO PAY Limited Stock of Engines Available First Coma, First Served STAN BAKER MOTORS Ondie-Plymouth Cars Dodfe Job Rated Trucks High and Chemeketa Streets i i AW 1 MS ..llot'!,,?.fco I fibril V Time to treat your family to rich, piping-hot shortcake, opped off with your favorite fruit of the season. Try this tested Celia Lee shortcake recipe tonight the choice of Mrs. Nina Church of Medford, Oregon. If you follow this recipe faithfully, using Crown Best Patent flour, you'll be delighted with the most delicious,, golden-brown shortcake biscuits you've ever tasted. Crown Best Patent makes the difference! Made from the Northwest's finest hard-wheat flour, Crown it repeatedly tested for uniform quality . . . and carefully blended to give you perfect baking results, every time. Remember, the best cooks in town, me Crou. M5. NINA CHURCH CIOWN COOI-OMHI-MONTN 1rm Mtel.re, O'tff c wxx. rowiiwioiii! CR0l IP I s an I