A I W. -f T'ty- 4is I sTfe45& C2?T SSt I S"!awr . was m'&Mlt' ' ""raw" Star w& """VSe! , . T " - S.,,.,. I I -tiis ' riS -vf a il Bean Pickina Levelling Off 'idi The snap bean season has JJA reached the levelling off point -vi&. 1 1 and Piekers iust about equal the - ??, I demand, it was stated at the Sa- I lem office of the state employ- 1 Mf.Flna WA1nacair Tn f some instances aaamonai pick- Viy"n,i ers could be used to advantage tV? hut thp overall nlcturp Is fair- A telephone call from Stayton Wednesday morning revealed that the situation there is under control. Since this section of the bean area is usually the one where labor fails to equal the demand, it is taKen as a fairly good indication that the crop is being handled in a satisfac tory manner. Between three and four hun dred bean pickers are being loaded early each morning from the labor office at South Cot tage and Ferry streets. Additional hands could be employed in the harvest of the early varieties of hops. Just what the situation will be in the prune orchards has not been determined. A better than average crop is reported. . Along the River Seventy years ago Butteville, above, at the northern extremity of French prairie hummed with ship ping and commercial activity. Now, like all of the other 113 landings between Salem and Canemah, only weathered piling indicate where the docks might have been at Butteville and willows have overgrown the waterfront. Below, Norman Kennedy's speedboat which made Canemah in four hours. The Willamette between Salem and Canemah, now a suburb of Oregon City, was explored to discover sites of wheat ports and steamboat landings that flourished along the stream in the 1880s. Cameraman Turns Sailor; Makes Voyage to Canemah By BEN MAXWELL Boating today downstream on the Willamette from Salem to Canemah is like visiting an old cemetery where 113 distinguished ncients lie buried beneath tottering tombstones, whose very inscriptions are fast becoming illegible. Captain Arthur Biggs, a veteran Willamette pilot in his com pilation of steamboat landings between Springfield and the confluence of the Willamette with the Columbia, names 113 landings between Salem and Canemah. Except for Butte ville and two or three others all have practically vanished. Savage landing, the first below Salem, Lincoln, Wheatland, Hell Roaring Smith's and Winoo skie's are now only names or vestiges to intrigue the im magination of the antiquarian. Norwaln Kennedy invited the Journal's representative to ride in his new speedboat on a run between Salem and Canemah now the westen surburb of Ore gon City). When the light, 15 foot craft propelled by a 22 horsepower outboard motor left Salem at 7:30 last Saturday morning the chill of autumn was upon the river. At Salem the Willamette is slow, odoriferous and dirty. When the craft, turning upward to 25 miles an hour, reached Spong's landing the smell of sewage and decomposing debris was not conspicuous. But the waters had not clarified. Slimy, repulsive marine growths per meated the stream all the 65 miles to Canemah. Walter Gerth came to Lincoln more than 60 years ago and re calls the 1890's when this water front town was the great 'wheat port on the mid - Willamette. One authority says 350,000 bu shels passed through Lincoln in a single season. Gerth recalls shipping 125,000 bushels a year in his own time as not uncom mon. ' Lincoln originated as Doak's ferry in the early 1850's. Forty years later docks, warehouses and industrial plants and indus tries located here lined the west bank of the Willamette for al most a mile. Gerth also recalls that three steamboats represent ing different lines regularly call ed at Lincoln for cargo and that during the autumn, when grain was delivered to the several warehouses, bustled with busi ness and impatient farmers long delayed in making deliveries. Wheat was king of all crops in the Willamette valley for 25 years after the Helen Angier cleared the Columbia river with that initial cargo of Willamette valley grain shipped to Liver pool by James Watt. Today only warped remains of a single dock constructed after 1910 re mains at Lincoln. But this is not visible from the river, though Gerth says the anti quarian may find it If he search es through the dense brush. At Wheatland, 13 miles be low Salem, the story is repeat ed. In 1881 the place had a district school, Evangelical church, the Wheatland and Oc cidental hotels, warehouses, docks, a grist mill and T. T. Cooper's saloon. Today there is a ferry crossing and the Daniel Matheny placidly follows a course fixed by a cable. Little or nothing more remains to sug gest a flourishing wheat port of 60 years ago. And so it is with Fairfield and Butteville. A few old pilings, black with age mark the site of forgotten landings whose names alone are perpetuated by his tory. Only Mill s woodyard on the west side of the Willamette a quarter of a mile above Wheatland retains the appear ance of a steamboat landing. Others, without Identification are stubs of piling protruding above the water and through the willows like the grim, skeletal remains of some prehistoric monster. Except for mechanical dif ficulties to be expected with a new motor the speedboat scur ried downstream to reach the moorage near Canemah. Foam gathered about her transom as she hurtled along through swift, narrows where the converging rivers gushed with astonishing velocity. Through such tortu ous and restricted channels raf ters, operating powerful propel lor tugs, guide long tows of logs with a skill that would astonish sternwheel captain of yesterday. Four hours running time brought the speedboat to her moorage. Oldtimers would de clare the time fair but nothing like the record established by the Ruth. On June 2, 1896, that sternwheeler left the locks at Oregon City at 7:26 and under a full head of steam pushed up stream to Salem in five hours and 49 minutes. Certainly that was longer than it took the speedboat to reach Canemah. But the Ruth was headed up stream and stopped at landings no longer visible to speedboat enthusiasts. tll. if It I Waving Service A ACROSS TOWN OR J ACROSS THI NATION A Whether you're moving in town or to a distant city, we offer the finest in worry-free moving serv ice. Our local storage and mov ing facilities are unexcelled. And as representatives for Allied Van Lines we can place at your disposal the know-how of the world's largest long-distance moving organization. Allied ' expert packers, handlers and drivers safeguard your posses sions every step of the way Csll us for estimates. Red Star Transfer Liberty A Belmont Ph. I-Slll AOINT FOR m MILITARY MFN AND VETERANS Wednesday, August 17 Kingwood past No. 81. American Legion at the Kingwood American Legion Hall in west aalem. amn Flew Artillery Dattaiion at Army Reserve auonset huts. Headquarters ana neaaquarcers company 318th replacement depot and 635th organized reserve corps composite group at Army Reserve quonset nuts. Military Manpower committee ai 7:30 p.m. in room 211 of the Post umce Duiiding. Thursday, August 18 Company O, 162nd Infantry regi ment. Oregon National Guard, at Salem armory. organized Naval Reserve Surface division, at the Naval and Marine Corps Reserve training center. Friday, August 19 Organized Seabee division at Na val and Marine Corps Reserve train ing center. veterans service committee at the Spa at noon. Plane Cuts Time Vancouver, B. C, Aug. 17 WP) A Canadian Pacific Air Lines plane flew directly from Shemya in the Aleutians to Vancouver last night, cutting more than six hours from the normal flying time between Hong Kong and Canada. Lon McCallister and Peggy Ann Garner in a rumantiC scene from "The Big Cat," an Eagle-Lion release, in color by Technicolor and starting tomorrow at the Grand with "Sham rock Hill." JT tr Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1949 21 Spokane Check Artist Nabbed Melvyn D. Dahlberg of Spo kane, Wash., was lodged in the Marion county tail Wednesday in lieu of $1000 bail on a check- writing charge. He was arrested by a city detective while walk ing in the 200 block of North Commercial street Tuesday afternoon. The young man has confessed to writing nine fictitious checks in Salem. Some of these checks were written on First National bank blanks, and others on Ladd and Bush check blanks. They all came back from the banks with the notation "unable to locate account." Dahlberg signed his own name to all but one of the checks, and, oddly enough, it was the check in which he used an alias that led to his arrest. Handle Oil company accepted a check dated August 10 from Frank R. Willard. A detective recognized the handwriting on this check as the same as Dahl- berg's so began to look for the check writer. He was found to be staying at Hotel Salem under the assumed name of Melvyn Bowers. Asks Asian Pact President Syngman Rhee (above) of Korea has asked Philippine President Quirino to call a conference to form an Asian union against communism. state board in matters of policy and administration. judy Garland and Van Johnson make their first appearance together as the stars of MGMs Technicolor musical romance, "In the Good Old Summertime," which comes to the Elsinore theater today. Benefits for Dependents Widows, children and dependent parents of World War 11 veterans who died within three years after honorable discharge were reminded this week by the Oregon department of veterans' affairs that they may De eiiglDie lor social security Dene fits earned as the result of the man s time in. active service. Title II of the social security act provides that such veterans are deemed to have died fully insured. to have received monthly wages of not less than $160, and to have been paid not less than $200 in wages in eacn year in wnicn tney had 30 days or more of active serv ice after Sept, 16, 1940, under the act. The veteran must have had 90 days of continuous service, a part of which must- have been between Sept. 16, 1940. and July 25, 1947, un less he was discharged sooner for service incurred disabilities. The effect of title II, approved in August, 1946, Is to assure monthly income payments to a widow with minor children, or to the dependent parents, or a lump sum payment to the unremarried widow without minor children, surviving a World War II veteran discharged without dishonor who died within three McGrath Opens K C Convention Portland, Aug. 17 OT Sena tor J. Howard McGrath urged Catholics to battle for Chris tianity and democracy in a speech last night that opened the supreme convention of the Knights of Columbus. The democratic party national chairman said the church must become militant. He warned I that "in Europe and Asia the old barbarities are reappearing with a new scientific ven geance. McGrath then criticized what he called the "crass materialism, which would elevate and glorify sense and sensuality, above spirit and conscience" in the United States. The Rhode Is land senator said "piety and pa triotism alike demand a re-minting of the coinage of our Chris tian civilization." Archbishop Edward D. How ard of Portland told the Catho lic organization that the respon sibility for a better world is a personal one for every citizen. "Reconstruction of the social order must begin with the indi vidual. We must be vigorously Christian in the home and in our daily work," he said, Nurses Advisory Committee Named Gov. Douglas McKay today announced the appointment of six members of the state prac tical nurses advisory council created by the 1949 legislature. Members are: Dr. Thomas E. Griffith of The Dalles, repre senting the state board of health; Mrs. Mary A. Knecht of Eugene and Mrs. Thelma West of Port land, representing practical nur ses; Wesley Lamer of Portland, representing field of hospital administrators, and Dorothy Vo sen of Portland, representing di rectors of nursing education. The law provides for the li censing of practical nurses and the regulation of practical nur sing by the state board of exam ination and registration of gra duate nurses. It charges the ad visory council with the respon sibility of consulting with the years after his discharge. Payments are not made, however, where survivors are receiving death compensation from the Veterans Administration because of service connected death. Applicants were advised to con tact their nearest social security office, county veterans' service of ficers, or the Portland or Salem offices of the Department of Vet erans' Affairs. Presenting the New ( Coupe delll( I llustrated above i the Coupe de Ville an ultra smart new Cadillac body type, designed for thoie who seek the low-swept lines and open-airiness of a con vertiblecombined with the comfort, convenience and safety of a closed car. It is a classic example of modernity and practical ity one of the most desirable and most useful models ever to issue from the boards of Cadillac designers. Yet smart and beautiful as it is the Coupe de Villus greatest superiority lies in the chassis on which it is built. For, like all Cadillacs, the core of its good ness is found in its ptrformante'xn the wonderful capacity of its new V-type engine; in the soft, even, restful manner in which it rolls over the highway; in the easy, effortless response to steering wheel and brakes. It is, truly, a symphony in motion. We should be pleased indeed to give you full details about this wonderful new body type as well as the other beautiful models which grace our show room. Why not come in at your earliest convenience? w Douglas McKay Chevrolet Co. 510 N. Commircial St. Salem, Ortgon $$ MONEY $$ FHA fJsrir - s kIchink SLAVERY 1 R Court St- I ' Ufiunn WINDOW 4H Real Estate Loans Farm or City Personal and Auto Loans State Finance Co. 163 8 Hih St Lie S2I 3 5222 ROOFING Now is the time to order that new root before the busy summer season. Expert workmanship with the highest quality material. Free estimates without obligation. McGilchnst & Sons 255 No. Commercial Street Salem Phone 38478 HIRAM WALKEt (w) SIHCE 1858 10 1 Pint Taste tU fire-wr quaJifi Remember mack by IMPERIAL V? llD(DWP iOTTl.IV E R 6 SONS.I"- IUINOIS 86 proof. Blended whiskey. J0 might whiskey. 70 gnin neutral spirits. Hiram Walker & Sons Inc., Penna, Illinois