POC f i Gr eheei priM able . Th up lo tie F m were navy Amti Th throw wi I by o town De on c prim gion lorti hand ciall; newl dren So and ' W reg year eont lief. $23,' acre d a day B: d. n 10 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Tuesday, November 1. 1949 East Salem Corners Call Many New Business Firms East Salem, Nov. 1 The four-cornered Intersections of East Sa lem are not being overlooked by small business or large business people who want and tee the opportunities open for new business. One of these corners is the intersection of Garden Road and Park avenue. Saturday one of the largest filling stations in Salem communities was opened for business on the northwest cor ner, the Kruzen Park 'n' Market Richfield service. The entire corner has been cemented and the building has large washing and lubrication rooms. Many potted plants and special gifts for men were given the custom ers on Saturday. Another corner that is build Ins ud is the Garden road and Swede road corner across the roads from the school house. The community store to the south has been sold to Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Reeves who have re cently come to Salem from Chi cago. A new variety store and shoe repairshop building is also being built near this store. The new barbecue at Lancaster drive and Silverton road will be open ed for business soon. There are now more than a dozen dif ferent community business cen ters in East Salem north of the Four Corners. Auburn Mrs. Orville Prunk was hostess for two birthday parties this past week honoring the birthdays of a son and daughter. Gerald's party was Saturday afternoon with his guests, Larry Etzel, Corby Fes kens, Kenneth Jacobe, Jimmy Jacobe, Kay Barney, Paul Bar ney, Tommy Fiske, Bobby Mal lie and Orvile Prunk, Jr. Beverly's party was Sunday afternoon and helping her cele brate were Janice Phillips, Don na Kay Smyres, Darlene Going, Ann Barney, Kathy Jacobs and Jeannie Jacobe. Games and the traditional birthday refresh ments were on the program for each party with the Halloween motif used for all decorations. Edina Lane Mrs. Drew Mich eals opened her home Friday afternoon for the October meet ing of the Edina Lane home ex tension unit. New officers elected were: chairman, Mrs. A. J. Shea; vice chaiman, Mrs. Drew Micheals; secretary-treas- Prowlers Reported In Amity Stores Amity Prowlers entered the building housing the barber ahop and post office over the week-end, entering a west door through Craner's living quar ters back of the barber shop. Jim Davidson, city marshal, noticed a car and that there were three men. By the time he reached the scene from his home the trio sped-away. A door sep arates these quarters from the back room of the post office. Craner is not here at present, and it was not determined what loss, if any, to the contents of his living quarters. urer, Mrs. F. D. Thompson; membership and hospitality, Mrs. Micheals; luncheon, Mrs. Max Madison; publicity, Mrs. Oliver Van Houten; finance, Mrs. Thompson; A. C. W. W., Mrs. James Keys; legislative and research, Mrs. Frank Arthur; li brarian, Mrs. Robert Klempee; 4-H clubs, Mrs. Phil Huber; rec reation, Mrs. Otis Bradbury; care of children, Mrs. Robert Clark and recreation, Mrs. Frank Caspell. This unit will ask for the candy making and sale project for the Azalea house fund dur ing the spring festival. Mem bers will make 12 aprons for the house sale in December. The special afternoon project discussion was led by Miss Betty Ann Boetticher on "Window Treatment." Tomkins Again Gets Censure Grants Pass, Nov. 1 (IP) Josephine County Pomona Grange Saturday night adopted a resolution censuring Morton Tompkins, state grangemaster, and the state organization for an attempted "purge" of 22 house members who voted for amend ments to the initiative and ref erendum laws at the 1949 ses sion of the legislature. Pomona master Victor Boehl announced that the vote for the resolution was 94 to S. The nearly-unanimous vote came after a brief argument be tween Boehl and Elmer Mc Clure, state grange overseer of Oregon City, who was present. Boehl charged the state grange action, in effect, would "force local grangers to help pay the campaign expenses of a fight to defeat local legislative candi dates which the grange might be supporting". McClure took the floor to deny Boehl's statement. Guy Carns, Fruitdale grange, was elected pomona master to succeed Boehl, who was not a candidate. MISSIONARY'S DENTAL TROUBLES Father Regan Lost a Filling, Finally Got His Tooth Filled Maryknoll, N.Y. (U.R) Father Joseph W. Regan of Fairhaven, Mass., a Maryknoll missloner in China, finally got his tooth filled, according to his letter received here. Father Regan lost a filling. The nearest dentist was at Kweilin, 70 miles from his station. Guided by a Chinese boy who said he 'knew the way, the missionary set out. First the boy took him to a large office building in Kweilin and escorted him to an office where Father Regan asked for the doctor. A white-coated man looked at his cavity, painted the tooth with iodine and gave him a pre scription lor tnroat gargle. i m v. . i -fcv mm ..:: ry-v- m I 1 V7 1 j p Skyline Ava Hall makes a pretty silhouette against the sky at Miami Beach, Fla. 13 DISCIPLES OP MAGICIAN Housekeeper Says Houdini Spoke to Her During Seance By JOHN M. ROACH New York, Nov. 1 tin A housekeeper claimed today Harry Houdini spoke to her over the telephone last Sunday midnight during the annual spooky seance held in an effort to contact the late magician's spirit. The jangle of a telephone interrupted the silents mediations of IS persons who sat with Joined- hands in the darkened base ment of the shadowy brownstone where Houdini lived for 20 years until his death on Hal loween in 1926. The call was for Rose Bon anno, SO, daughter of the pres ent owner and former friend of the magician. She had just left the circle for fear that the num ber 13 might discourage the long-awaited spirit. A few minutes more of silence. Suddenly, she burst into the room screaming that she had Just spoken to "Harry." But Joseph Dunninger, a mas ter magician to whom Hcudlnl entrusted a secret 10-word coded message which he promised to repeat after his death If spirit ually possible. Indicated he thought Miss Bonanno's imagina tion was overworked by Hal loween witches and goblins, no doubt. He has faithfully kept up the ritual of trying to reach Hou dini each year the eve of his friend's death date and jealousy guards the message he believe never will be revealed. Miss Bonanno said the "voice" told her: " 'Remember, I gave you pen cils and paper and candy when you were a child. I have a mes sage for my good friend Dun ninger. Tell him "Paper Magic" page 118, figure 12'." She produced the little known volume by the late magician. She and Dunninger turned to page 118. There was no figure 12. But Dunninger conceded a diagram of a square on the page might fit the third letter in the code. He's going to study it, but fully expects to sit at an other seance the 24th next Oct. SO. A $10,000 prize offered by Dunninger and hit associate to anyone who can give him the wording of the message has never been collected. It was at stake the other night when the IS disciples of Houdini assem bled at their meeting in Hou dlnl't former home. Moss-Grown Industry Heading for New Boom van" v "inis It strange," the priest saia. "We made a mistake," the boy-guide said. "That is an ear and throat doctor. Not a den tist." They finally found a dentist. who examined the tooth, com mented on the weather and said he did not have the material to fill the cavity. He recommended that the priest visit a doctor at a hospital at the other end of town. How ever, after walking across town, ramer Kegan round that the doctor had left for a two-week vacation. There were no other dentists in town. The boy-guide finally suggested that they visit the watchmaker, who had a stand on a narrow street. While a curious crowd watch ed, the watchmaker filled the priest's tooth from a small tube. I do not know how hveenic the job was," Father Regan wrote. "But the filling staved in my tooth. I haven't had a toothache since, thanks to the watchmaker's tube of all-pur pose cement." The gavial, resemblina" the crocodile, Is believed to be the oldlest living species of air breathing vertebrates. Attention Loggers! Top Prices Paid for Logs at Burkland Lumber Co. Turner, Ore. Ph. 1125 SStalINSTANTLYTtrreJiiew SORETIIROAT Caused by Colds Junt nib on Munterola . . . It's mad eiwcially to promptly relieve couk ha. Bore throat and aching chmt muscle due to colds. Mimterole actually helps break up local congestion in the up per bronchial tract, nose and throat. in s Strang t ha. ITCH 4Advrlirmrnt) (Arabic) It klfhlr Usiaa an tm Una fat IIU H tup, lli tela aaaaa to f ha tuh - aitla k I h Is fcuane arataarr tnaiamls. EX tOaU hi lit k Hth-ntla alaiMl tBilaatl?. Oalr thrta aara EX so MA iraalMMt k) reaalrta. "Mall arar tttva araapt aitrallaa Al all Fr4 Mrr Dm tMtUat ..4 r GOOD Clrai Mlam." BEARDS' NEW HIT SWEEPS COUNTRY! Mnw kl Stunk tratken m engk ana tattt mumUm! Something m in cough relief h liking the U.S. by norm! Smith Brother! Wild Cherry Cough Drop 1. Tf m f4. 1 War (... r..H, .W Dk) wwah hm m M. i. Cm) wry nichatl Yet, that tut Wild Cherry Drops rt aVlicious-V ibr) utrk! Get pick todir! oNir it Capital Drug Store State and Liberty "On th Corner" GIFT FOR A FINE FELLOW h waoft A new Schick Electric Shaver is a gift he'll enjoy every day 0 lit IV INT In hit lift, give th.t man a gift h.'U thank you for every time ht me you I A new Schick Electric Shaver will give him fatttr, mert comortahlt thavie that art Just at Wom at ha wants. Comet la handsomely covered all-metal travtl case, richly stamped in gold. Capital Drug Store Store and Liberty "On the Corner" With the utilization of the by-product from the ginning, the moss industry may return to its former higher economic bracket." HARVEST Workers ttart out to gather Spanish Moss AP Ntwifetturu) Baton Rouge, La. Louisiana's Spanish Moss crop may treble its million-dollar annual take, the way the Louisiana department of commerce and industry tells it. Here's what the department says: Spanish moss just grows and grows. It's hard to find a tree in South Louisiana that isn t sport-- ing a moss tignon. Some people like L.M. Jof- frion, Sr., of Napoleonville, La. and his three sons make a living at collecting it. After all, it's there for the picking. There's no planting, no cultivation. Just harvest. After it's gathered, the moss Is ginned and sold, chiefly through New Orleans and New York brokers, for use mainly in furniture upholstering. Last year the official gross revenue was estimated a $1,100,000. But what about the waste. the fibrous bark that's left over after It's been ginned? That's where the elder Joffrion comes in. "It's black gold," he says. "In stead of throwing it away, like we'd been doing for 40-odd years, we save it. I've got ma chines that dehydrate it and pul verize it. "It comes out a fine black mulch and plays an Important part In agricultural experiments. Some day it may be just the thing for rejuvenating and re storing this country's topsoil." It's on this note the commerce and Industry department ends its report. It recalls that Loui siana's moss industry once brought $3,000,000 annual rev enue, observing: fOSM Now Really ltt!2i CHEW Food! If your fait tetn allp. here's a discov ery that enables thousands to again bit joyously Into a Juicy steak and even eat apples and corn on the cob without fear of plates slipping. It's a wonderful new cream In a handy tube, called stazb. staze holds plates tighter, longer seals edges tight helps keep out food particles. Oet economical 35 BTAZE. Money-back guarantee. Unemployment Jumps 225,000 Washington, Nov. 1 The government reported today a 223,000 increase in unemploy ment in the month ended Oct. 8. But it said there was also a rise of 38,000 in the number of people with regular jobs, out side of farming. The census bureau indicated the coal and steel strikes caused some distortion in the figures. In the first place, strikers are counted as "employed" in the bureau s tabulations. It said, however, that the rise in unemployment apparently was due at least in part to the fact that "a large proportion" of strike-idle steelworkers and coal miners were "seeking other em ployment while off from their regular Jobs." As a result, they were listed among the jobless who were hunting work. Total unemployment was list-' Arnold Is Injured By Runaway Tractor Lebanon, Nov. 1 (?) L. E. "Loffy" Arnold, long prominent in Linn county fair activities, was injured by a runaway trac tor on his farm near here today. The tractor, which he had been driving, ran over him when he got off to open a gate. The extent of his injuries was not determined at once in the hos pital here. Arnold, a real estate dealer here, has been manager of the Lebanon Strawberry fair for years, and has handled the Linn county booth at the state fair. PTA't Will Join Independence Dr. Rod Lang ston, assistant professor of edu cation at the University of Ore gon, will speak on "Subject Mat ter for Their Development" at a meeting of the Independence PTA at the high school Monday night, November 7. The Mon- mouth PTA has been invited. ed as 3,576,000. This compares with 3,351,000 in September and 1.642.000 in October, 1948. ,a AM u niu - Texan Comes Tiny Military College' Natchez, Miss., Nov. 1 U.R)A generous Texan today came toj the rescue of tiny Jefferson Mil itary college, which is nearp broke after losing a $50,000,000 endowment by refusing to teach white supremacy. , j Nathan J. Klein, prominent businessman and civic leader Of Houston, Tex., gave the little school $5,000 to pay its debts.' Spokesmen for the academy, located at nearby Washington, Miss., said Klein's gift would keep the school from closing Its doors, this year at least. , But one trustee estimated that Jefferson would be $10,000 In debt by June and would have to close after 147 consecutive years of operation unless further aid is forthcoming. Austrians have been awarded ten Nobel prizes: four for medi cine and two each for physics, chemistry and peace work. ) J. ENJOY THIS ma mum bourbon to. m f 'u't. P"nous for ll$ old-timt yuo and rich, full flavor " Cff i S5 2lI Now enjoy again lhe iJitW I 1 jINl Ttirai'ii t- ' w'skeY famous for its J GtoW)o2 , nir old-lime- quality and N "' STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKET 86 FBOOF NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS COBP, NEW YORlft ' 1 waiur.lM-HEAD j ILL rJ7Z&A l IF you want to know what's "the newest thing" in automobile engines, look at the Buick engine pictured here, and you'll see the words "valve-in-head." But it happens that this isn't new with Buick. As a matter of fact, the valve-in-head engine was in vented hack in 1902-U.S. Patent No. 771095 and immediately, Buick adopted the principle, which became the first in a long string of "Buick firsts." Not everyone went for the idea then. In spite of the fact that this engine "breathes" more freely gets fuel in and exhaust gases out more easily others hung onto their pet ideas. Then came the airplane, with its need for maximum power from every drop of fuel and every maker of internal combustion air plane enginei adopted the valve in-head principle. And more recently with the hope that higher-octane fuels will be come available a lot of automo tive engine designers are taking a new look at the valve-in-head idea. B ut just for the record, we'd like to point out that Buick got there first. And ever since, Buick has gone steadily ahead, building up a name as "valve-in-headquarters." Buick engineers reshaped pistons to put Fireball wallop in these engines. They stepped up compression ratios as fast as better fuels came along. So perhaps you'll want to re member, when you hear the term ' "valve-in-head," that this is the type of power that made Buick famous. If others want to climb on the bandwagon, we say "more power to them" and no pun is intended. But Buick has been doing more with valve-in-head right from the start. And we might add it stands to reason that Buick is not through making this type of engine better and better. M0i CtfAKlY THAN tVE Yol Krr ro 0'!ff vut (C. Whrm btlrr mmlmmmhlln mr III Bl lCK will imlld thrm t k HfNr I. Mud. MC Nmd, mrr Mv WW.. OTTO J. WILSON CO. 388 North Commercial St. Salem, Oregon