Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 23, 1949, Page 10, Image 10

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    0 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, August 23, 1949
r,:ast Salem Finds Vacation
)ays Filled With Activity
Ijrred i
yum,
lmer
East Salem, Aug. 23 Entertaining out of the state guests and
acation trips are still special activities for many East Salem
Imilies. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jayne of Swegle community
icbent the week-end at the home of his father, Marion L. Jayne at
y.berdeen, Wash.
Hpuse guests in the home of
;tr. and Mrs. William Hartley
B Lancaster drive were Rev.
id Mrs. Walter Feaye of
' (:ominey, Okla. Rev. Feaye is
, je minister for the first Chris-
:an church in Hominey.
j Mrs. Ralph Hein was hostess
r a dinner party with mem-
rs of the TPM club as guests.
overs were placed for Mrs.
iura Pangle, Mrs. Louis Neu-
an, Mrs. Charles Botorii, Mrs.
ed Amman, Mrs. Sara Wood-
Miss Helen Hiller, Mrs.
mer A. lerrm, Mrs. K. E.
andt, Mrs. John Verstegg,
trs. William McKinney, Mrs.
filliam Hartley, Mrs. Nadia
(ocker, Mrs. William Damery
B id the hostess. Birthday hon
j( rs were given Mrs. Pangle and
u Irs. Neuman.
((A dinner party Sunday in the
. iaipn nein nume uii mm-usier
rive honored the birthdays of
lapur members of the family hav-
E and 23. They are Jacqueline
tolcomb, Stanford Hein, Mrs.
'id Loe and Ralph Hein. Other
'iipt wpm VA T.nun Mpt
'nS toeorge Crump and two daugh-
ofc IHro. .Tiiriv nnrt Nanpv.
lat 9iMYe ttslnl, Wln onnnrr, noninl
( Bd her daughter and grandchil
llren, Mrs. George Crump, Judy
t od Nancy are spending several
'Miys of this week at Rockaway
iifach.
3 ;
i
leep Conquers
i,431-ff. Peak
SALIDA, Colo., Aug. 23 (U.R)
ll Vi lone JeelJi using a wincn iur
fill Ik tr a hoisting power, con-
ti, ibered 14.431-foot Mt. Elbert
MTite Sunday just to show the
11 1 World it could be done.
fj (Six jeeps started up the tow
U 'iing face of Mt. Elbert second
r liilghest peak in the United
Mjjates but only the one ma-
rhlne was able to reach the top.
' fa jThe single jeep that made the
Hwrade was piloted by I. R. Jack
al P3dn, who with Orin Didrich, his
' Mjgrtner in a Salida auto service
Fnhop, sponsored the junket.
i nJapan Classes Call
mUl-ITIUIIIIIUUIII IIIUCIII
b3 'Monmouth, Aug. 23 VP) A
ertqrmer Oregon College of Edu-
Ff Stion teacher was en route to
1 lipan today, to teach the young-
filers of American personnel
stationed in that country.
. . .The woman, Miss Caroline
AMoyer of Heppner, was selected
"lor the overseas assignment by
the Army. She had been a su-
pervising teacher at the college
ediere. In Japan she will teach
I lllhe first, second and third grades.
Plans Separation Mrs. Xa
vier Cugat (above), plans a
divorce from her famous maes
tro husband because they are
not together often enough.
Mrs. Cugat says he never stays
with me, but always leaves me
at a "little table." (Acme
Telephoto)
'Allergic' Wife Asks
Annulment- of Marriage
Los Angeles, Aug. 23 VP) Af
ter his wife failed to win a div
orce on grounds she was allergic
to him, Nolan H. Holdridge, 26,
yesterday asked the marriage be
annulled because she could not
be his wife in fact.
Joyce Holdridge, 27, had told
the court she broke out in a rash
when she was near him.
They were married in 1947.
He lives in San Francisco, she
lives here.
On his ninetieth birthday, E.
J. Hunt, one of England's oldest
anglers, caught two pike
'Is
Ready at Fair
Although Labor day is still
a week or so away, Manager
Leo Spitzbart of the Oregon
State Fair has pronounced the
exposition ready for its 84th an
nual renewal beginning Sept. 5.
Hurried construction sched
ules have made it possible to
avoid much of the usual la3t
minute confusion. A small am
ount of work remains to be
done on one of the new entranc
es to the grounds from the north.
Workmen are cleaning . up the
last bit of painting on the new
"Kiddieland," juvenile amuse
ment area that is slated to be
extremely popular for eager
youngsters and tired parents.
Advance mall ticket sales to
all fair attractions are report
ed to be the heaviest in fair
history, according to Joe Simer
al, ticket manager. Mail requests
have been received from all
sections of the state.
Some difficulty has arisen
in the allocation of stall and pen
space to the record number of
livestock entries in the various
open classes. However, Ben
Newell, Salem, superintendent
of the livestock show, has told
Spitzbart that all show strings
will be accomodated when judg
ing starts Labor day morning.
Entries in the combined tex
tile and culinary show are about
average but departmental heads
expect the lists to swell before
the entry deadline of Sept. 4.
Mrs. Verle Goode, Stayton, flor
al superintendent, says available
display space is gone with more
garden clugs than ever before
planning to exhibit.
Commercial space on the
grounds and in the fair's main
gncultural building has been
sold out for several weeks.
The younger gentry is slated
for a big thrill with a glimpse at
the new toy railroad route and
station. The route has been made
more life-like, a new tunnel and
station erected, and the tracks
completely rearranged.
Admission prices at the out
side gate are the same as before
the war, fifty cents including
tax. Children 12 and under will
be admitted free. There will be
four free midway shows each
day on the grounds featuring
top circus and stage talent.
FILM CZAR NOT WORRIED
Television Is No Threat
To Movies, Says Johnson
By PETER HAYES
Spokane, Wash. (U.P1 Eric A. Johnston, motion picture chief,
doesn't blanch at the thought of what television will do the movie
industry.
"I think television will stimulate rather than retard the indus
try," Johnston said in an interview.
The president of the Motion
Picture Association of America
likes to compare the advent of
television with the beginnings of
sound movies
"When engineers first started
having success with sound
many movie executives jnooK
their heads and said it wouia
ruin tne industry, jonnston
said.
"But look what happened
And I think we'll be able to
make as much out of television
as we did out of sound."
The film executive told how
a committee of engineers and
producers are at work now
studying the possibilities of tele
vision
"The way it looks now, the
plan will be to present a tele
vision show to a group of thea
ters in a certain region," he
said.
"We'll probably start with
sports events and from there
lead into live talent shows. I
think television will prove an
invaluable supplement to the
movies.
Meanwhile, Johnston is opti
mistic over the present econo
mic status of the film business.
"We are emerging from an ad
justment period that began two
years ago, he said.
He pointed to two problems
producers faced. One was high
costs brought on in the war by
the 90 per cent excess profits
tax and the other was the dif
ficulty of converting huge
amounts of foreign currency into
American dollars,
The $150,000 - a - year movie
-i- a
Zl. MF I
85 proof Canadian Whlikoy. Imported In
bulk by 1. S, J. Dunbar & Co. Bottl.d by trt.
Old Monastery Co., Saaftl., Washington.
Pint S2.95; ', Quart $4.72
riginfli
Hearing Aid
Center
Zenith
Aurophone
Super phonic
Batteries for all makes of
hearing aids . . , cords for
most instruments.
Let us know your needs!
Mail orders Filled
Promptly
Morris
Optical Co.
444 State St. Phone 3-5528
Salem, Oregon
Best tip in town
it fiio
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PING-FREE POWER
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Trip to the mountains for trout, or down to the beach for a swim
your best tip: Chevron Supreme Gasoline. For each season this
premium-quality motor fuel is climate-tailored for the different
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We take better care of your car
boss said the second problem
gradually is being licked.
"We have brought into play
all sorts of deals to swap for
eign earnings for American cur
rency. In Marseille harbor, for
instance, we raised a sunken
tanker with French francs and
sold it to Standard Oil for
American dollars."
I ...
Johnston said he would know
soon the outcome of his bid to
capture the Russian film mar
ket. "We've got a man over there
now 'screening' American mov
ies for Soviet officials according
to an agreement I made with
Russia last year," he said. "They
may take all or none."
The dynamic "movie czar" is
slated to make a tour of Europe
the middle of September with
several other members of the
Economic Cooperation Admin
istration advisory board.
Ex-Employees May
Open Plywood Mill
Olympia, Wash., Aug. 23
Nine former employes incorpor
ated a new firm here today with
which they hope to take over
the Tacoma plant of the Oregon
Washington Plywood Co., Gari
baldi, Ore.
Elvie Erb said the plant had
MONEY
FHA
Va
$$
Real Estate Loans
Farm or City
Personal and Auto Loans
State Finance Co.
15S S. High St. Lie. S2I 3-5222
closed last July with the an
nouncement that it would not
be re-opened. He said the group
would hold a meeting in the
Holy Rosary church auditorium
at Tacoma at 8 p. m. tonight in
an attempt to interest other
former employes and other per
sons in the venture. They hope
to buy out the plant which em
ployed 200 persons when it
closed, he said.
The new employe firm, called
North Pacific Plywood, Inc.,
was capitalized at $400,000 in
articles of Incorporation filed
with Secretary of State Earl Coe.
Phenomenal waves 10 to 15
feet high, traveling as much as
45 miles an hour, are formed by
the spring tilad "bore" in the
mouth of the Amazon river, says
the Encyclopedia Americana.
Thousand, now chew .teak, laugh, talk
almoit a. if they didn't hav. falM teth I
Tney use 8TAZB, amazing new cream
l..in a handy tube. BTAZH Hal. edgea
TIOHTI Helps keep out food particle.
Get 35 8TAZB. Money-back guarantee.
STAZC KOUrS PtATEl TMkTOL LOMf.
FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP
AUTO TRUCK FIRE
When you insure with Formers Ins.
Group, you insure with the west's lead
ing automobile insurance carrier.
SAVE up to 30 with safety.
BILL OSKO
Phone 3-5661
466 Court St.
BILL OSKO
Dist. Mgr.
Grand Opening
of
YEATER
APPLIANCE CO.
375 Chemekera
Will Be
Thursday, Aug. 25
2 P.M. to 10 P.M.
FEATURING....
WESTINGHOUSE
APPLIANCES
ANDTHE BIG
TWINS WINS CONTEST
(Still Time to Enter Lots of Prizes)
PRESENT STORE WILL BE CLOSED. ALL DAY
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 24th AND THURSDAY, AUG. 25th
lit c 4 "
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When you call for the f am ily taxi, or need a telephone for any other reason, have you noticed how there always seems to be one handy t
"Come get us, daddy, the movie's over"
1. It doesn't just happen there's a public telephone not
far away when you look for it Locations have been care
fully selected to make sure service is where it's needed
most.. .in theatres, filling stations, drug stores, terminals.
And special installations are often made to meet the needs
of crowds at conventions, fairs and the like. Today there
are some 85,000 public telephones at work in the West
3. Good service for you comes from the big job of han
dling millions of calls every day. But the extras mean a lot,
too like putting telephone booths in handy places. They
add up to keep telephone service one of today's best buys.
After all, a local call still costs just a few cents.
2. More errands run, more jobs done, more time saved
for you. ..telephone service has many duties. And public
telephones make service still more valuable by putting all
telephones, both residence and business, within conven
ient reach...no matter where you may be. More and more
are going in, too...as we keep pushing our job of furnish
ing good, well-rounded telephone service to the West
Your telephone is one of
today's biggest bargains
The PadfiC Telephone W) and Telegraph Company