Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, October 07, 1949, Page 15, Image 15

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Dam-Building Mountaineers Suspended 350 feet above
Flathead river, in northwestern Montana, jackhammer opera
tori drill holes for blasting on the Hungry Horse dam.
East Salem School Keeps
Community Club Interest
East Salem, Oct. 7 Interest in the school highlighted the busi
ness meetings of most clubs meeting in East Salem this week.
A social meeting of the committee members of Swegle Parent
Teachers association was held at the schoolhouse Wednesday
night. The president, Ralph Alsman, presided with definite plans
for several interests considered
Program Chairman Mrs.
Henry Martin will be assisted by
Mrs. John Jansen, Mrs. Howard
Lee and Mrs. Arthur Willard;
Mrs. John Zwemke will serve
as magazine representative, Miss
Nancy Lee will assist in care of
children during the meetings,
Mrs. Ray Bernardy will be hos
piality chairman, Mrs. H. Reese,
special program opening exer
cises; a safety chairman and mu
sic director will be appointed
later.
Sana Marshall was present and
has offered to plough and help
prepare the school grounds for
the lawn. Mrs. Charles Norton,
membership chairman, will be
gin her drive at once. Special
plans were made for the first
regular meeting which will, be
the reception for the teachers
the evening of October 18. Work
will be started by men in the
community on the bicycle rack
on Thursday evening.
Mrs. Louis Neuman assisted
by Mrs. Helen Enloe was host
ess for the October meeting of
the Swegle Woman's club at
her home on 38th street. Lunch
eon was served to Mrs. Austin
Kyle, who will be a new mem
ber of the club; Mrs. Ralph Hein,
Mrs. Clifford Yost, Mrs. E. E.
Brandt, Mrs. Charles A. Salter.
Mrs. Albert Patz, Mrs. Ralph
Becker, Mrs. Homer J. Conklin.
Mrs. Charles Norton, Mrs. Louis
A. Neuman, Miss Joan Neuman
and Mrs. William Hartley.
At the business meeting pre
sided ever by Mrs. Neuman
plans were made for a lunch
eon to be served in Elfstrom's
store on December 17.
The club will assist in any
boys organization that is spon
sored by the PTA. Mrs. Charles
Norton has been appointed as a
member of the standing commit
tees of the Marion County Fed
eration of Woman's clubs, chair
man of the civics committee. She
will speak on the program at
the Aurora meeting the 28th
of this month.
Mrs. Frank Ricket was sur
prised by her husband, children
and grandchildren with a birth
day party in honor of her 80th
birthday. She was taken for
an automobile ride and on re
turning, found a turkey dinner
had been prepared and ready
for serving.
. Present were her husband
her daughter and son-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Heff of Co-
quille; her daughter and son-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Fortune:
her son and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Ricket;
grandchildren Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Cooper, Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Osborn, Hazel Heffley,
Sandra Ricket and great grand
daughter Linda Cooper, all of
Salem. Many cards and pres
ents were presented the honor
ed guest on this special anniver-say.
Model 4-H Meeting
Will Be Featured
A model 4-H club meeting
will be a feature of the regular
meeting of the Marion county
4-H Local Leaders' association
on October 19 at 7:30 p.m. in
Mayflower hall, 2135 Fair
grounds road, Salem.
Election of officers for the
1950 club year will be held at
this meeting. Nomination of the
following candidates were made
at the September meeting: For
president. Miss Theresa Dehler,
Mt. Angel; vice-president, Mrs.
Verny Scott, Union Hill; secretary-treasurer,
Mrs. Fancheon
Lappen, Swegle; members-at-large,
Mrs. John Cage, Middle
grove, and Elmer Jeskey, Au
rora. Plans for the annual leaders'
banquet to be held November 3
at Cloverdale school, will be
discussed and committees appointed.
The model meeting will be
presented to the leaders show
ing what can be done by a small
group of club members. It is
planned that a member from the
state 4-H office will be pres
ent to comment on the meeting.
All 4-H Club Local Leaders of
Marion county and the city of
Salem are incited to attend.
Gang Plot to
Control Politics
Chicago, Oct. 7 U. An organ
ized gang plot to grab control of
local politics across the country
is being financed with money
from illegal slot machines, the
director of the American Muni
cipal association said today.
Carl H. Chatters, executive sec
retary of the association, said he
asked U. S. Attorney General
J. Howard McGrath for federal
help to fight racketeers on a na
tional scale.
Chatters issued a statement
charging that gangsters make
millions of dollars a year with
illegal slot machines.
'With this money racketeers
buy large holdings in legitimate
business," he said. Their hold
ings give them "tremendous lev
erage" in local politics, he said.
Chatters' request for federal
help was made on behalf of New
Orleans, Los Angeles and Port
land, Ore., chiefly, he said.
McGrath has not answered the
request, but he intends to see
federal officials in Washington
about it next week, Chatters
said.
'The potential income (from
illegal slot machines) is fabu
lous," he said. In Weiser, Ida.,
a town of 5000 population, 60
municipally owned slot machines
earn $160,000 a year.
Clerk Breaks Secret
Of 23 Years on Title
London, Oct. 7 M" For 23
years Robert Vernon, 57-year-old
lawyer's clerk, kept mum
about his title.
Today, though, he disclosed
he's the fourth Baron Lyveden
V : : ' '
n't J
German Steel for Britain Girders of a bombed briage
over the Spree, purchased by England, are cut into lengths
for shipment to furnaces in the German western zone.
had been, in fact, since he inher
ited the title from his actor fa
ther in 1923.
Vernon is getting married Oc
tober 18 at fashionable St.
Georges church. He thought it
better to wed under his true ti
tle. His bride-to-be is Mrs. Doris
Patterson, a widow.
"I did not publicize my title
because I found it necessary to
do a job of work," explained
Vernon, whose father's estate
was small.
"When you are seeking jobs
a title can be a hindrance. And
there were many times when I
was not in a position to live up
to it."
The first Baron Lyveden, en
nobled in 1859, was a cabinet
minister.
Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon. Friday, October 7, 1949 15
Uncle Sam Finds Himself
In Barrel Over Liquor Aging .
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS
Washington, Oct. 7 u.R Your old Uncle Sam Is up to his top
hat in barrels. Trying to decide what liquor can age In a
used barrel.
At the moment, the question is being arei'ed out at a enmnli.
cated hearing going on before the alcohol tax unit.
The nub of the issue is wheth-
er liquor which has been stored
two years in a used barrel and
two years in a new one should
count as four-year-old whisky
Under present regulations, only
the time the liquor has spent in
the new barrel is counted.
One of the witnesses at the
hearing was short, dark and
stocky Dr. A. J. Liebmann, a
research man for a distillery
(Schenley).
The balding scientist didn't
act like a man of science. He
got right down to earth.
What a man smells and tastes.
he said, goes beyond the chem
ists and physicists.
Dr. Liebmann reverted to
scientific talk for a couple hun
dred paragraphs. Then, he came
down to earth again. He said.
in plain language, that the man
who takes a drink now and then
doe his own testing throueh
his nose and his own tongue.
XTiemical analysis pffft."
The above are my own Quotes.
but they paraphrase what the
good doctor had to say.
The whisky people, across the
years, from George Washington
who had a still in Farfax coun
ty, Va., have contended that the
only way to make good whisky
is to put It in new charred oak
barrels and let "er set.
The complicated contention
now is that what is wrong with
putting a lot of whisky in one
barrel, then dumping it after
awhile into another barrel? No
matter how old either barrel ii?
That is getting even mora
complicated if the whisky hap
pened to be dumped into a new
barrel in the first place.
Dr. Liebmann was warming
up to his subject and at the lame
time kicking back at the government.
He said that a government
chemist made an analysis of
whiskies some aged in new
charred barrels and some stored
in used barrels.
'This strikingly demonstra
ted," the doctor said, "the deficit
resulting from storage in the
practically exhausted barrel, a
deficit which cannot be made by
Delated and abbreviated storage
in new barrels for a short time.
Which means just what It
says, I guess.
Dr. Liebmann says that tha
government is not a drinking
man.
The whisky people are trying
to straighten out the record now.
They gave me a sample.
It tasted all right but I don't
know much about barrels.
AS PURE AS MONEY CAN BUY
Four Corners Baptist Church
Welcomes a New Pastor
Four Corners, Oct. 7 Members and friends of the Four Cor
ners Baptist church and the First Baptist church of Salem honored
tha Rev. and Mrs. Victor L. Loucks and their daughter Janet
Tuesday evening at a covered dish dinner in the church annex.
Approximately one hundred people came to extend greetings to
the new residents.
Following the 6:30 dinner Dr.
Lloyd T. Anderson, pastor of
the First Baptist church of Sa
lem was master of ceremonies.
Mrs. Oliver Hickman led the
group singing. An instrumental
duet by Doris and Donald Chit
tick. Thomas Means, Edward
Lucas and Walter Lottis repre
senting the First church of Sa
lem as deacons and trustees ex
tended greetings to the Loucks.
W. R. Gould as deacon .and
Vernon Forrest as Sunday
school superintendent, welcom
ed the new pastor and family to
the church. Henry Benz, re
presenting the Business Men's
Association of Four Corners ex
tended greetings from their or
ganisation and welcomed them to
tha community. Rev. Loucks
has aseumed the pastorate of the
Four Corners Baptist church,
owing here from Scio where he
wu pastor of the First Baptist
church for seventeen years.
The aroma of popping corn
and toasting marshmallows will
greet the pasaersby Oct 10 at
4:30 o'clock at the Community
hall when the Four Corners
Girl Scouts will begin their fall
schedule. All girls ten years
old and older are invited to at
tend. Leader will be Mrs. Ray
mond Hough with Mrs. Earl Thu
lin as co-leader.
Recent house guests of the
Nelson Andersons, 390 S. Lan
caster drive were their daugh
ter and grandchildren, Mrs. Hen
ry TenPas, Joan, Bill and Lynn
TenPas of Corvallis. Mrs. An
derson's sister. Mrs. Denver
Greer of San Francisco, visited
for ten days in the Anderson
home. While here the sisters
went to Wenatchee, Wash., to
see their brother.
Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Foubert.
4345 Glenwood drive, are spend
ing a few weeks in Aumsville
with friend.
Lebanon Annexation
Election Date Set
.Lebanon. Oct. 7 UP) A vote on
whether areas west and south of
here should be annexed to the
city will be held November 22.
The areas have an estimated
population of 2000. If added to
the city, Lebanon's population
would be about 10,000, on the
basis of Postmaster Merrill
Smith's estimates.
The suburban areas have pe
titioned for the annexation and
the Lebanon council set the bal
lot date.
Jones Rites Call
Silverton Among local rela
tives attending funeral services
for Samuel Paul Jones, Sr., of
Brooks. Thursday were Mr. and
Mrs. William Evans, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Evans, Mrs. Ethie
Riches, Don Evans, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Conklin, Mr. and Mrs. Le
Roy Gustafson and Mr. and Mrj.
Loyall Timm. Masonic rites
were observed, with concluding
rites at Pioneer cemetery.
1
Saturday
c :-f 1?
Telephone -0704 R. I-SS65
DR. RAY J. PINSON
FOOT SPECIALIST
Suite 4Z7-42I Oregon BMf.
Corner of Salem
High St 8tate 8ts. Oregon
ROOFING
Now ii the tima to order that new roof before the
busy summer season.
Expert workmanship with the highest quolity
material.
Free estimates without obligation.
McGilchrist & Sons
25S No. Commercial Street
Salem Phone 38478
I Leather or 11
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f HALF
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AW
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I I j 1 While I I
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I f I Millers 1 i
J t I SHOES REPAIR I 1
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I fa Down,u'"y
'WM- "VOU'U. NEVER BUY
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sportsmen everywhere. Good food helps to make any
outing a memorable trip. Put FRANZ the good
bread at the top of your food list. It's flavor, fresh
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Good luck -be Sure its a deeri