Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, July 11, 1949, Page 9, Image 9

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Washington
AF of L Meets
Spokane, Wash., July 11 (U.B
Four Important steps were ex
pected to be taken by some 800
delegates to the Washington
State Federation of Labor con
vention which opened today.
They are:
1. Take action speed up the
development of resources in the
Pacific Authority.
2. Prepare to convince people
that benefits for workers in
jured off the job or ill should
have the same benefits as work
ers injured on the job.
3. Ask the government to ov
erhaul its present loyalty check
system used for its employe.
4. Overhaul its educational
and political league, the political
arm of the federation.
Hospitality Day Set
At Rockaway July 17
Rockaway, Ore., July 11
Sunday, July 17, is set, aside,
through north Tillamook coun
ty, as Hospitality day. All the
principal communities along
Highway 101, the beach resorts
in particular, will serve clam
chowder, free, to all visitors.
Hospitality day was inaugur
ated, during 1948. The outstand
ing success for that narty was
such that Hospitality day was
made an annual affair.
From Manzanita, on the
north, to Oceanside, on the
'south, clam chowder will be
available to visitors from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday, July
l'l.
Convenient highway locations
have been arranged from which
to dish out the chowder. Each
community has joined hands
with its neighboring community
to the end that plenty of deli
cious clam chowder will be
available from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The '48 chowder party served
visitors from 26 dfiferent states,
according to guest book regis
trations. Tillamook county boasts the
finest chowder clams in Amer
ica. .
Chowder will be available at
Oceanside, Bay City, Barview,
Rockaway, Wheeler, Nehalem
and Manzanita.
Civic Improvements
Made At Lafayette
Lafayette A special election
was held at the school gymnas
ium Friday night, at which Rob
ert Tudo and B. E. B. Kennedy
were elected directors to fill
vacancies of Ed. Bryan and
Charles Dooley on the Lafayette
grade school board.
The gymnasium has been re
paired by a new foyer floor and
the front porch has been reserv-
iced with cement. The mam
floor of the building has been
refinished.
Labor has started in the wid
ening of the highway just east
of the city, limits, by cutting
down trees along the right of
way. Trailer houses and road
equipment are parked near the
Locks Road entrance off the
highway.
Morrises on Vacation
Zena On a two weeks vaca
tion at San Francisco are Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Morris and
Lauryl and Larry. Morris is un
able to work after severely cut
ting his hand on a jagged piece
of tin which he grasped as he
was falling from a ladder.
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INSURANCE
AUTO
. TRUCK
At Savings FIRE
See Bill Osko
What About Saturday Believing that smooth bathing
beauties have a never-ending appeal, Louis Fenner, Lebanon
marketman, talked a neighboring plumber out of a bathtub,
filled it with water, ice and watermelons, and accompanied by
enticing advertising, was kept on the run to care for throngs
who came to look and remained to fish. (Epress photo)
Decline in Inventories Gives
Ray of Hope to Business
New York, July 11 (ff) Shrinking inventories gave some encour
agement to a nation of decline-wearj businessmen this week.
Factory warehouses were less bulging: wholesalers' stockrooms
were less cluttered with goods; retailers' shelves weren't quite as
tightly packed.
It was a step In the right di
rection, for it meant produc
tion could get away to a quick
start once the consumer loosens
his purse strings;
But it wasn't the whole an
swer by a long shot. It will take
more than a drop in inventories
to start business activity really
humming again.
There was plenty in the
week's news to discourage as
well as encourage.
The threat of a steel strike
Britain's austerity program and
f resident Truman's coming eco
nomic report had everyone in
a dither of speculation.
And overall business- activity
during the week a now familiar
line declining production and
sales down again.
For many economists, how
ever, the decline in inventories
at manufacturing, wholesale and
retail levels was a good omen.
They knew wholesalers, re
tailers and consumers alike
must start buying replacements
sometime. They said the pros
pective buyer has the dollars
that he's only waiting for a bet
ter bargain.
Declining stocks of merchan
dise do not mean that purchas
ing will start tomorrow or the
next day.
But they do indicate that
when buying finally gets under
way there will be a rapid up
turn in the rate of business ac
tivity in order to keep the con
sumer's wants satisfied.
This week reduced inven
tories contributed to an upturn
in the non-ferrous market. As
demand picked up copper and
lead prices advanced for the
first time since March.
The threat of a steel strike
kept everyone tense from Wall
Street to Main Street.
A strike against "Big Steel'
probably would affect 189 steel
producers employing 500,000
workers.
It would greatly hamper the
nation's industrial machinery
but it probably wouldn't have
anywhere near the crippling ef
fect of the last major stoppage
in 1946.
In the previous big strike the
country was in the midst of
post-war economic recovery
the demand for steel was in
tense. Today backlogs of orders
are practically non-existent and
production has been steadily declining.
unemployment figures were
affected by school-age job seek
ers who wanted work for only
tne summer months.
Government employment was
at a three year high.
The census bureau reported
federal, state and local employes
numbered ' 6,219,000 in April,
latest month available.
Department store sales drop
ped a 11 per cent below a year
ago, according to the federal
reserve board the largest de
cline in some time. For the
first six months, sales were only
four per cent below the first
half of 1948, however.
The New York Stock Ex
change was doing nicely during
most of the week and had five
successive advaclng sessions to
its credit.
Then, President Truman told
his news conference he was bull
ish look at the stock market,
he said.
And within a matter of min
utes the market advance halted.
Four Corners Homes Greet
Visitors From Distance
Four Corners, July 11 Visitors in the S. H. Cable home, 370
South Elma avenue, were John Carden of Pea Ridge, Ark., and
Trudy Carden of Raymond, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. Cable were
hosts at a family dinner. Present were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Brad
ford of Lowell, Ore. Mrs. Treva Cable. Wilda and Wanita Cable,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cable of
Salem, Mrs. E. E. Walker and
Verlaine Walker of Four Corners.
Mr. and Mrs. Fay C. Osborn
and Janet Osborn of Los Angel
es are visiting Ohborn's parents
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Osborn on
E. State street.
House guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Peter Wright, 740 South Alma
avenue, are Mr. and Mrs. An
drew Duncan of Phoenix, Ariz.
Mrs. Duncan is Mr. Wright's sis
ter.
Mr. and Mrs. George Weigart
and family attended the Slover
family reunion at Stayton Sunday.
Silas Keener has sold his
property at 4237 Durbin avenue
to Henry Weatherman, 4259
Durbin avenue. The Keener fam
ily has moved to a farm several
miles from Salem. Weatherman
plans to remodel the former
Keener house.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Rogow are
spending their vacation in Los
Angeles visiting relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. I. H. White re
turned last week from several
days spent at Seattle and Vashon
Island.
Leaving Saturday for an ex
tended trip along the coast were
Mr. and Mrs. LeBaron Force,
Barbara and Dick Force. Mrs.
Force operates the Four Cor
ners Beauty shop.
Bottomless Salt Lake Crater
in Arizona is so highly saturat
ed with natural salt that bathers
cannot sink.
Woman off 70
Hated Commies
New York, July 11 (U.B Mrs.
Silvia Mapelli, 70, who hated
communists so much she lost
her American citizenship, was
back in the United States from
Italy today with her full citizen
ship restored.
Mrs. Mapelli, an Italian who
became a naturalized American
in 1905, arrived at New York
International Airport yesterday
on a plane from Rome. Mrs.
Mapelli lived in Denver, Colo.,
from 1905 to 1937 but returned
to Italy that year when her hus
band, and grandson died with
in seven months.
At the time of the 1947 Ital
ian general election, Mrs. Map
elli said she became so incensed
against the communists she vot
ed not knowing that by so doing
she forfeited her United States
citizenship.
Because of the pleas of her
niece, Miss Mary E. Frazzini of
Denver, congress recently re
stored Mrs. Mapelli's citizenship
by a special act. Miss Frazzini
met her aunt at the airport
yesterday with the happy news.
Each bee colony has its own
graveyard near a stream of water
and when o bee knows that death
is approaching, its duty is to walk
to the graveyard, so it doesn't
contaminate the other bees.
loans, $978,867.82, Schachtsick
said.
Don Driggs of Salem has been
added to the staff, where he will
be in charge of installment cred
it loans. He and Mrs. Driggs
plan to live in Salem until af
ter the first of the year.
Going to Quantico Cpl.
Delbert J. Ditter, member of
the Salem Marine Corps Re
serve unit, who last week left
for Quantico, Va., to spend
six weeks there attending the
Marine Corps platoon leaders
class.
Bank at Stayton
Reports Deposits
Stayton At the June 30 call
of the comptroller of the cur
rency, the Stayton branch of
the First National Bank of Port
land, deposits of $2,810,569.36
and loans of $1,208,180.73, were
reported by G. W. Schachtsick,
manager.
A year ago the figures were:
Deposits, $2,974,417.54, and
Permanent
MATERIALS .
MASONRY and METAL
at
Pumilite West Salem
Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Monday, July 11, 1949 9
and Harlan Jackson; shooting
firecrackers in city limits of 260
W. Ewald avenue, Salem, $5;
and for reckless driving, Donald
McCreary, $50.
Fined at Silverton
Silverton Saturday city po
lice court fines meted out by
Police Judge Arthur Dahl, in
cluded on speeding charges, $10
fine for each LaVerne Totland
Are S
You Interested in)
!' In A Bigger Return I H
ij on Your Savings n .
Savings Earn Sooner 3-
at Salem Federal! ... w X $
Money placed in your : c
account during the first ' $ t
10 days of any month, " J
j ;arns from the 1st of ; i
II that month. Start now 6 n I
jl earning our current 13?
jj per annum. I :
l Savings Federally S?
Insured I ! s
Tirst in
AMERICA!
FIRST IN MOVING
Mayflower Warehousemen
ofler the finest and most
dependable moving ser--vlce.
FIRST IN STORAGE
Protection and care are as
sured for your possessions
when you store In a May
Sower Warehouse.
FIRST IN PACKING
"Packed with Pride" Is not
IusI a slogan of Mayflower
lut an earnest interest In
the job at hand.
Capital City
Transfer Co.
230 S. Front St. Phone 2-2434
Mike Elliott's Feudin'
Turns to Libel Suit
Portland, July 11 m Sheriff
Marion (Mike) Elliott, who has
been feuding with Portland
newspapers, Saturday filed a
$500,000 libel suit against The
Oregonian, and defied his op
ponents to "go ahead and start
a recall."
Elliott asserted in an inter
view: "I have no fears. If the
voters want a recall then let
them recall me. Personally I
doubt that enough of the voters
want me out of office badly
enough to do somethinf about
it. But if they do, let them
prove it."
This was in response to an
Oregonian editorial that called
for Elliott to resign, and hinted
that a recall movement might
follow.
MADE FROM EXPANDED SHALE
EMPIRE LITK-ROCK
BLOCK are the outstanding
advancement in building
block manufacturing in the
Pacific Northwest
Midt by expanding shalt un
dtr intsnss heat, Litt-Kock is
the scientifically controlled
aggregate used in Empire
Lite-Rock Block.
Llf-Rtk Blik... BUT BY TiST!
Lits-Rock, not to bs csalsssd witk "Llght-wate," Is sa inert sfiTegsM
which fivts Empirs Llte-Kock Block s lower cosfficitnt of expansion
and contraction and grsatsr inonlation, strsnath and durability. Other
ieatwesi mtilMUtj, light wight, sound
aisoratioa, tit rttittntt, gtod acoustics.
IMPIRI Lilt-Rock BLOCK
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Woerf far H typos of rooMenHol, pubHc,
smsMMrsM cmd inaSiotrlal construction.
mm sr WMTt for MHMITf MffHNMMTHNf
Distributed Exclusively in the Salem Area by
Pumilite Block & Supply Co.
Rte. 8, Box 910 out Edgewater, West Salem Ph. 25643
10
w, -j- "7y:
' ' l' ' 1
bringing 142,000
kilowatts of needed
electric power . ;
n
From Hungry Horse Dam on the south fork or
Flathead River in Montana will come more power
for distribution through the Northwest Power Pool.
This project is one of the first major steps towards
satisfying the power hunger of this growing region.
Advanced preparations for construction are already
well along, and Hungry Horse initially will produce
more than 142,000 kilowatts of power. Later thie
output will be increased to 285,000 kilowatts, a little
more than half that of Bonneville Dam.
' Bonneville Power Distributor
Hungry Horse Is situated approximately 450 miles
northeast of Portland and a little more than 200 milef
northwest of Butte, Montana. Its power will help
this area meet the tremendous power demands created
by population and industrial growth. It is but one of
the major projects which are planned in conjunction
with many smaller ones to supply the Pacific North
west with an additional 10 million kilowatts of power.
Although power demand will continue to exceed powet
supply for another few years, these great plans spell
power aplenty again in the years to come!
PORTLAND GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
1 486 Court St. Ph. 3-5661