Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 28, 1950, Page 14, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    i: fed -fo&l
Rfc-r anaiaESBtyfl
"' Another Landmark Passes Eppley's store corner of State
and South 19th street, suburban shopping center of horse
ana buggy days and Home of Eppley s Perfection Baking
powder, now being razed to provide a site for a filling station.
Suburban Landmark Razed
To Make Way for Gas Station
By BEN MAXWELL
Eppley's store, home of Eppley's Perfection Baking Powder,
Joy of the housewife who baked her own in the early 1900s,
Is now being razed and the familiar location at the southeast
jeorner of South 19th and State streets will soon become the
site for a Union Oil filling station.
Oldtimers remember Charles
-'-'M. Eppley, but when he came
to Salem is not definitely
known. In any event Clark &
Eppley were conducting a gro
cery store at 100 Court street in
;VM)91. Perhaps the depression of
tfehose times made the grocery
business unprofitable for Eppley
.ihad become a sewing machine
agent in 1896. i -About
the turn of the century
?,Jim McGuire is said to have con
structed a building at the cor
ner of 19th and State streets for
the purpose of operating an ice
"plant. If ice was made there
"."available records, do not men
tion It.
In 1905 Eppley was running a
.general store in this location.
,'Oldtimers declare it was, in-
deed, a general store. At this
'shopping center of horse and
buggy times one could fit him
ielf with a derby hat or buy a
popcorn popper. Eppley stock
ed horse collars, harmonicas and
."hoe handles. Farmers with skit
tish horses found it safer to buy
at Eppley's than to take a risk
jon the hitching rail at the New
'York Racket store in downtown
Salem. 4 '
But available information in
dicates Eppley. started making
..his celebrated and widely adver
tised Perfection Baking Powder
'ln 1907. A part of his expanded
"building adjacent to the store
and along the creek was dedicat
ed to this enterprise. Eppley's
Perfection Baking Powder, pre
'sented in an advertisement that
changed not all through the
years, found wide acceptance
STOCKS
(By the Associated Press)
American Can 119
Am Fow & Lt 16
Am Tel & Tel k....148i
Anaconda . .' 29'l
Bendlx Aviation .. 37U
Beth Steel '.. - 33'
Boeing Airplane' .'. .V. 257
Calif Packing 34
Canadian Pacific i 15
Case J I Wk
Caterpillar 32 3i
Chrysler 6414
Comwith & Sou '
Cons Vultee 10 Mi
Continental Can ' 38V
Crown ZcHerhach
Ourtiss Wrljfht 6
Douglas Aircraft 10
' Dupont de Nem 62',h
General Electric . 434
General Food ; ;
General Motors r 73l,4
Goodyear Tire 46
Int Harvester 27'a
Int Paper 35
Kennecott 544
. Llbby McN & L I-"
Lons Bell "A" 33?i
Montgomery Ward 55
Nash Kelvinator 17
Nat Dairy 35
NY Central 12T4
Northern Pacific .'. 18
Pac Am Fish
Pa Gas & Elec 33
Pa Tel & Tel 104',
Penney J O 50
Radio Corp , 13'
Rayonier 24
Rayonier Pfd
Reynolds Metal 2 Mi
" Richfield
Safeway Stores 33
Sears Ro.ebuck , 42 'i
Southern Pacific 52',i
Standard Oil Co 67
Studebaker Corp 27 k
Sunshine Mining 976
Transamerica 16V
Union Oil Cal 26', 4
United Airlines 83V.
Union Pacific 14',-.-
U S Steel 28:
Warner Bros Pic 15
Woolworth 49
- --, L . . ) ' 3
: Giant Invades Paris Fernand Bachelard, Belgian giant,
seven-feet, seven inches and 451 pounds, asks directions of a
policeman in Champs Elysees during visit to Paris.
among housewives who preferr
ed to knead and bake their own.
Perfection Baking Powder
dropped out of the market about
1917 and the firm of C. M. Epp
ley & Co. is mentioned in the
Salem city directory for the last
time in 1941.
Upon the death of Charles M.
Eppley sometime in the 1930's
his store and property passed to
his son, Charles. Roy Harland
and Bert Edwards acquired the
holding in 1943 and they in turn
sold it to Fred C. Ritner. Union
Oil company now holds a lease
on the site, 103 feet on State
street and 105 on South 19th,
and soon after the old landmark
is removed will start construc
tion of a filling station.
Samson's Afraid of Violet
Sunderland, Eng., Jan. 28 (P) A stage strong man called
Samson declared in court yesterday he is afraid of a woman.
She is Violet Hanson, petite 29-year-old bus ticket taker,
who is five feet four and weighs 120 pounds.
"No man," said Samson solemnly, "is a match for a woman,
however strong he may be."
Sampson Joseph Bcsford in private life had Mrs. Hanson
arrested for "threatening to shove my eyes out." He said the
argument began when he tried to pass through the front door
of their apartment building just as she was trying to come in.
On the stage, Samson holds an iron bar in his teeth and
bends it into an arc. He lets two teams of nine men play
tug of war with a rope looped around his sinewy neck. He
has a truck carrying 10 men run over planks laid across his
powerful chest.
"And you're afraid of this woman?" asked the judge in
credulously, "Yes, sir, I am," said Samson.
Mrs. Hanson pleaded innocent to breaking the peace. The
case was dismissed.
Apartment of Tomorrow to Be
Circular; Outside Walls Glass
By LEO TURNER
(Ut-lted Prtas Staff Correspondent)
New York, Jan. 28 U.R) The apartment building of tomorrow
will be circular, the outside walls will be glass and every apart
ment will be a penthouse, William Zeckendorf said today.
Big Bill Zeckendorf is the man who owns a jail in Boise, Ida.
As president of Webb & Knapp, a big real estate firm, he owns
a lot of other property over the
country,
Zeckendorf sat on the edge of
a table beside a glass model of a
modernistic 14-story building
with duplex apartments spiral
ing from the ground to the top.
"There it is," he said. "There's
the answer for the man who
builds them and the people who
live in them. Convenience, flexi
bility, sunlight, fresh air and
privacy for the tenant, and
cheaper for the owner to build."
The apartment house of to
morrow is the result of the team
work of Zeckendorf and small,
modest, I. M. Pei, 32, a Chinese
who came to the United States
in .1935 to study architecture
and later became professor of
architecture at Harvard.
Zeckendorf arrived in this of
!ice one morning a little over a
,'ear ago after driving past some
if the city's new apartment
irojects. He was disgusted with
Stocks Advance
Moderately
New York, Jan. 28 Radio-television
stocks sprinted in
front of a generally higher stock
market today.
Gains for run-of-the-mill is
sues were limited mostly to mi
nor fractions although Chrysler
was an outstanding exception
with a rise of a point or so.
A couple of radio shares jump
ed as much as two points or so
at one time before profit taking
clipped the high points of the
rise.
Today's spurt in radio-TV is
sues was the latest evidence of
interest in a group that has ex
cited considerable speculative
and investment demand in re
cent weeks. Television set mak
ers have been enjoying a con
tinued boom and comments by
most manufacturers have been
highly encouraging. .
Strength in Chrysler develop
ed despite the strike that crip
pled the company earlier this
week.
Corporate bonds stuck to a
fairly even price course.
SALIM MARKETS
Completed from reports of Salem dealers
for the ruldance of Capital Journal
Readers. (Revised dally).
Betall Fcea Prices;
Eke Mash $4.65.
Babbit Pellets 14.20.
Dairy Feed 13.70.
Poultry! Buying- prices Grade A color
ed hens, 19c; Brade A Leghorn hens
and up 14c. grade A old roosters, 14c;
grade A colored fryers 3 lbs. 23c.
Errs
Burin r Prices Large AA, 34c; large
A, 31-34c; medium AA, 32c; medium A,
38 -30c; pullets, 22-37c.
Wholesale Prices Ere wholesale prices
S-7e above these prices; above grade A
generally quoted at 39c; medium, 33c.
Butterfat
Premium 66c; No. 1. 64c: No. 3, DB-80ci
(buying prices).
Butter Wholesale grade A. 63ct re
tail 73c
the adherence to the same old
designs, with builders cutting
corners on costs because of in
creasing prices.
"Instead of making technical
progress, we are going back
wards," he said.
He called Pei, who recently
had joined the firm as chief
architect, and told him to de
sign a new type of apartment
house.
"I drew a circle," Pei said.
"Inside the circle, I drew an
other one as a core. The me
chanical installations in a build
ing, heating, wiring, and things
like that, make up 30 'per cent
of the cost. If it is air-conditioned,
they from 48 per cent
of the cost. The core reduced
that.
"Next, for maximum reduc
tion of costs, the units had to
be standardized for prefabrica
tion. All segments of a circle
are identical. So it was a circle."
The spiral design came in to
allow for expansion or contrac
tion of apartment size to take
care of the tenant's finances or
growing family.
The apartment house of tomor
row is a series of wedge-shaped
units spiraling around the cen
tral core which contains the
elevators, stairs, piping, wiring,
ducts and air conditioning. Each
apartment is a simplex, duplex
or triple arrangement of one or
more wedges, each with 800 feet
of floor space and a 30-foot-wide
window. Each apartment has a
40 by 8 foot terrace screened
by the structural design from
any peeping neighbors.
The apartments will be rented
by the square foot, not by the
number of rooms. The spiral
design allows a tenant to ex
pand or contract to fit his pock
etbook and family needs. The
apartment can be partitioned as
a tenant wishes. The removable
partitions are insulated with fiber-glass.
The overall structure is rein
forced concrete, with no col
umns or other dead space.
The designers estimate that it
will take a year of experiment
ing on building methods before
they are ready to start. The site
for the first one will then be
selected.
"It may be New York, Los
Angeles, or who knows," Zeck
endorf said.
A C3
.t ftMWtM
X.
Silverton Only one man in Silverton loves that snow,
especially the added five inches that fell Friday forenoon
with apparent indications of more of the same kind, this is
the genial Charlie Borte of West Center street, pictured
early in the forenoon, gassing up at the Legard station.
Denzel Legard through Borte deserved the snap shot as he
definitely refuses to accept any pay for his cleaning walks
and roads all over town. Incidentally, Borte made this snappy
little tractor from all scrap material excepting the rubber
tires. He never wears a coat. Cotton shirt. Even sleeves
rolled up.
Dawn of History Studied
By Science on Clay Tablets
Sofia, Bulgaria, Jan. 28 U.R) Questions which have baffled the
world's historians for ages are raised by the discovery of Europe's
most ancient writings by a Bulgarian scientist.
Prof. Vladimir Georgiev, scientist who deciphered the 3,600-year-old
Minos (Cretan) picturegraph writings on clay tablets,
has thrown new light on the or-f-
igins of the alphabet and on the
migration of the Greek tribes
into the the Aegean basin, ar-
cheologist Ivan Velkov said.
One important question rais
ed by the discovery is whether
the alphabet came originally
from the Cretans or the Phoe
nicians, Velkov said.
It is already well known that
Cretan colonists settled in Cy
prus, Syria, Phoenicia, and Pal
estine, in the second millennium
B.C. It seems likely that the
Phoenicians got their alphabet
from the Cretans, improved on
it, and passed it on to the
Greeks.
The deciphering also puts
"under an entirely new light the
problem of the Greek migra
tion , into the Aegean region,"
Velkov said.
It now seems that no man
lived there in the Paleolithic
(Old Stone) Age. The earliest
population dates back only to
the Neolithic (New Stone) Age,
which may be from the fifth
millennium B.C. It spoke some
Indo-European dialect, the ar
cheologist said.
These tribes were not nation-
conscious at the time, he said.
They began to leave their homes
in the territory now known as
Yugoslavia and Albania, and
came from as far north as present-day
Hungary and Czechoslo
vakia, to settle in Northern
Greece in the 13th century B.C.
and later in Thessaly.
The further Hellenization of
the Aegean region was carried
on in the 12th to seventh cen
turies, B.C.
"The very Greek people of
the classic ages were the result
Spanish-American War Vet
Seeks Wife Divorced in '07
Madigan General Hospital, Jan. 28 VP) A 79-year-old Spanish
American war veteran here wants to find the wife he divorced
in 1907 and settle down.
Jacob Kaufman, for 50 years an Alaska sour-dough, is seek
ing the members of his family to share his estate in British
Columbia in case anything hap-$
pens to him. He is here for a
minor operation.
For the past several years, the
stocky woodsman has been mak
ing periodic jaunts from Alaska
and northern Canada to the Se
attle - Tacoma - Portland area
where he believes his ex-wife,
two daughters and grandchildren
are living.
Kaufman hasn't seen his wife,
Belle, since their divorce in 1907.
He exchanged letters with his
daughters, Nora and Lilly, until
1923. But there has been no
word from them since.
When Kaufman last heard of
Belle "the only one of my
several wives I really ever
loved" she had remarried and
was living in Seattle.
They were married in South
Dakota after Kaufman's dis
charge from the army. Later
they moved to Seattle and Kauf
man worked in the Arctic dur
ing the summer months, driving
freight trains in the Stony Creek
area.
He made trips to the north off
and on beginning in 1890. In
1907 the work became steady.
Kaufman says Belle became tired
of his frequent absences and
left him.
The old timer ran away from
his home near Grand Rapids,
Mich., at the age of 10 to become
a cabin boy on failing ships.
to. v
... ,
of an extremely complex mix
ture of pre-Greek and Greek
tribes," Velkov explained.
Much earlier, Crete had been
a center of a flourishing civil
ization. By the second millen
nium B.C., it had a well-developed
society. Slavery predomin
ated and slaves were highly
praised as merchandise.
Kings or "passilos," as the
Cretans called them, headed the
state. Their palace possessed
well kept archives of clay tab
lets, which now serve as a source
of information for scientists.
The palace also had a military
arsenal, probably the one re
ferred to in the notation on a
clay tablet: "To Turanik was
given 1 war chariot, 1 mailed
suit, 1 horse."
Mighty Knosos, capital of
Crete, spread. its power far into
the continent. Athens, Tirint,
and numerous other cities were
under its heel and they had to
pay tribute in kind. A decipher
ed tablet tells us that "Tirint de
livered 100 rams, 650 sheep, 30
oxen, 151 cows, 80 pigs and 6
mares."
The subjugated tribes were
forced as well to deliver some of
their people as slaves. "Athens:
7 women, 1 boy, 1 girt," one tab
let reads. As Velkov remarked,
the legend that King Minos, fa
bled King of Crete, levied on
Athens a yearly tribute of 7
young men and 7 girls is seen to
have some basis.
The U.S. Public Health Serv
ice gave emergency aid to 17
states striken by epidemics or
disasters in 1949,
He circled the globe several
times before joining the army in
1898. And he's held a wide
variety of jobs in the far north.
During World War II, Kauf
man and a partner bought 150
ac-es of timber from the city of
Port Coquitlaim, B. C, about
nine miles north of Vancouver.
Kaufman now owns the prop
erty alone.
The value of the land now has
increased from $125 to $300 an
acre. Kaufman says he has
some workshops and a small
sawmill on the property and now
he wants to build some small
cabins to rent.
And he wants all the members
of his family he can find to come
and live with him. He's espec
ially interested in a grandson
"a red-headed kid between 14
and 20 who I understand looks
and acts like his grandmother."
"I'm sure I spotted him on a
bus in Seattle last year," Kauf
man says. "I offered him a dol
lar to tell his name, but he re
fused. "Just like Belle lots of
spirit," Kaufman chuckled. "I'm
sure that's the boy. But some of
the family had better show up
pretty soon I can't last more
than 10 or 15 more years. May
be Belle will come back to me
now that I've settled down."
I 'I
urn
X ... Id1 i:''
l9
. MARKET
QUOTATIONS
Salem Livestock Market
IBy Valley Packing Company)
Wooled lambs 121.80
Feeder lambs $14.00 to 118.00
Calves, good (300-490 lbs.) 122.00 to 124.00
Veal 150-300 lbs.) top 134.00 to 127.00
Fnt dairy cows $13.50
Cutter cows 110.00 to $13.00
Dairy heifers tia.oo to $15.00
Dulls $14.00 to 119.00
Portland Produre
Bulterfat Tentative, subject to Imme
diate change. Premium quality maximum
to .35 to 1 percent actdlty delivered In
Portland 61 z lb.; S2 score. 65c lb.: 80
score, 63; 89 score, iac. Valley routes and
country points 2c less than first.
Butter Wholesale FOB bulk cube to
wnoirsaiers, grade S3 score, 63c. A
92 score, 63c: B score, 60o lb., O 89
score, 59c. Above prices art strictly
nominal.
Cheese Selling price to Portland whole
sale Oregon singles 39-42c, Oregon 6
small loai. 44 -45c; triplets 1H less than
singles.
Ejcki (to wholesalers) A grade large,
35-3?'.?e; A medium, 34-3 5 "Ac; grade B
large, 34-35 'qc; small A grade, 33c.
Portland Dairy Market
Butter Price to retailers: Grade AA
prints, 68c; AA cartons. 69c: A prints.
6Bc; A cartons 69c; B prints, 65c.
Eats Prices to retailers: Grade AA
large. 41c doz,; certified A large, 40c.
A large 39c; AA medium, 38c; certi
fied A medium. 38c; A medium. 37c: B
medium, 33c; A small, 35c; cartons 2c ad
ditional. Cbeeie Price to retailers: Portland
Oregon atns lea 39-42c: Oregon loaf, fi
ll) loafs 44tt-45c lb.; triplets, Vh cents
1pm than slnples. Premium brands, singles.
SU'aC lb.; loaf. 63 lie.
Poultry
Live chickens No. 1 oualltv FOB
Plants No. 1 broilers under 2 lbs, lie;
fryers, 2-3 lbs., 19 - 21c; 3-4 lbs., 23c;
roasters, 4 lbs. and over, 23c; fowl
Leghorns 4 lbs and under, 15-I6c; over 4
lbs. 16c; colored fowl, all weights, 19-20c;
roosters, all weights. 14-lfic.
luricey Net to growers, torus. 90-Slo.
hens. 44c. Price to retailers, dressed; A
ycung hens. S0-51c: A vauni tomi 37.
38c; light toms, 4l-42c.
KaDDits Average to rrowerm, live
hltcs, 4-5 lbs.. 17-180 lb.: S-6 lbs.. lr-17e
lb.; colored 2 cents lower: old or heavy
does and bucks, 8-12c. Fresh dressed
Idaho fryers and retailers. Oc: local. 4B.
52c.
Country-Killed Meats
Veal Top quality. 40-42o lb.! other
grndes according to weight and duality
wilh lighter or heavier, 30-34c.
Hogs Light blockers. 33 -25c; sows.
18-aic.
Lambs Top quality, ap Tinners. 30 -40c:
mutton, 16-lBc.
Beef Good cows. S2-34c lb.: canners-
cutters, 29-30C.
tress Dressed Meats
(Wholesalers to retailers per ewt.):
Beef steers. Good 500-800 lbs.. $40-42:
commercial, $38-41; utility, $35-37.
Cows: Commercial. S37-38: utility. ias.
36; canners-culters, $31-34.
Beef Cuts (Good Stcensi; Hind' quarters,
$48-50; rounds, $45-4B; full loins, trimmed,
$64-63: triangle, $38-40; square chucks.
u-qj; nos, jst-ou; lorequarters, $34-38.
Veal and calf: Good, $48-61) commercial,
$39-48; utility, $32-39.
Lamb: Good-choice soring Inmh. 144.
46; commercial, $39-41: utility, $36-41,
Mutton: uooa, u ids. oown, $4-26.
Pork loins. $43-44: shoulders. 18 Ihs..
down, $41-42; spareribs, $40-45: carcass
es, $27-29; mixed weights, $2 per cwt.
lower.
Portland Miscellaneous
Onions SuopIv morlerate. mnrkft. atoa.
dy; Ore. yellows, No. 1, $2.50-60; 10 lbs.,
45-48C. Yellows, med. $2.50-75; larga, $2.50
75; boilers, 10 lbs., 36-38c.
Potatoes Ore. Deschutes russets. No.
1A. $3.75-90: No. 2. 50 lbs., tl as.4fi; if.
lbs., $1.00-10; 15 lbs., 65-70C. Wash, net
ted gems, No. 1, $3.60-65; No. 2, $1.15-20:
large bakers, $4.25-50; Idaho russets No.
1A, $4.25-50.
Hay New Croo. stack bales, tl H Nn
2 green alfalfa, truck or car lots F.O.B.
Portland or Paget Sound markets, $39
41 ton; U.3. No. 1 mixed timothy, $44
ton; new crop oats and vetch mixed hay
or uncertified clover hay, nominally $38
30 .depending on quality and location
baled on Willamette valley farms.
Caseara, Bark Dry 120 lb green 4o
Wool Valley coaras and medium
45c lb.
Molmlr 25o lb. on 12-month growth,
nominally.
Hides Calves, 97c Ib.i according to
weignc; pips, id.; oee I, 11-120 lb.;
bulls, 6-7c lb. Country buyers pay 2c less.
Nut Quotations
Walnuts Franquettes, first quality Jum
bo. 34.7c: large. 32.7c: medium. 97.3r!
second quality Jumbos, 30.2c; large, 38.2c;
medium, 26.2c; bnby, 23.2c: soft shell, first
quality large, 29.7c; medium. 26.2c; first
quality large. 20.7c ; medium, 26.2c; sec
ond quality large, 27.2c; medium, 34.7c)
baby 22.2c.
Filberts Jumbo, 30c lb. large, lie:
medium, 16c: small, 13c.
Harmons Surprised
By Birthday Dinner
Fruitland Mr. and Mrs. Al
bert Harmon were surprised
when Mrs. AUie Gardner, their
daughter, their son and his wife,
Mr. and Mrs, Alan Harmon and
their daughter Dona Dee Simp
son of Portland came with well
filled baskets for their birthday
dinner.
Alan Harmon hrnnehfc & Dl0-
ipntnr and showed them Dic-
tures. The Harmon's other
Hmiahtpr AHriip Oarriner lives
in Lincoln, Neb., and was not
here for the birthday dinner
party.
LEGAL
NOTICE OF rNTENTION TO IMPROVE
TWENTIETH STKEKT FROM BELI.E
VUE STREET TO OAK STREET
NOTICE HEREBY IS OIVEN that the
Common Council of the City of Bnlcm,
Oregon, deems it necessary and expedient
and hereby declares Its purpose ana in
tention to Improve Twentieth Street
from the north line of IJollevue Street to
the north line of Oak Street, in the City
of Snlnm, Marion County, Orcxon, at
the expense of the abutting and adjacent
property, except the street Intersections,
the expense or which will be assumed by
the City of Salem, by bringing said por
tion of said street to the established
grnde, constructing cement concrete
curbs, and pavlnit said portion of said
street with a 2 '4 Inch asphaltlc con
crete pavement 30 fH in width In ac
cordance with the plans and specifica
tions therefor which were adopted by the
Common Council January 23, 1950, which
are now on file In the office of the city
recorder and which by this reference
thereto are made a part hereof. The
Common Council hereby declares Its pur
pose and Intention to mnke the above
described Improvement by and through
the street Improvement department.
Written remonstrance against the
above proposed improvement may be
filed with the city recorder at any time
within ten dnys after the final publica
tion of tlilA notice by the owners of the
property afffcted.
By Order of the Common Council Jan
uary 23, 1050.
ALFRED MUNDT. City Recorder.
Jan. 29, 30. 31, Feb 1, 2.3, 4, 6. 7, 6, 8.
NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT
NOTICE HEREBY IS OIVEN that Hugh
Oliver CutFforth, as administrator of the
estate of Eunice Ocrtrude Cutsforth, de
ceased, has filed in the Circuit Court of
the State or Orr-Kon lor me uouniy or
Marion, In Probate, his final account,
and that said Court has fixed Wednes
day February 8, 10.10, at 0:30 o'clock A.M.
of said day, at the court room of said
Court In Salem, Marion County, Oregon,
th t me and Place lor Hearing ob
jections thereto, and for the settlement
thereof, at which said lime and place
all pcrsnos having objections to such fin
al account and settlement thereof are
hereby required to appear and show
cause, If any exists, why said account
should not, in all things, be allowed and
approved, and why said estate should
not be settled and closed and tha ad
ministrator thereof discharged.
HUGH OLIVER CUTHFORTH,
Administrator Aforesaid.
PEERY T. BUREN
Attorney at Law
Pioneer Trust Building
Salem, Oregon.
Dated and urn pubiisneo: January 7,
1950.
LODGE
rKingwood Lodge No. 204, A.F.
CT fc A.M. Special E.A. degree
Monday January 30, 7:30 p.m. 25
Capital Journal, Salem, Ori
PFC Twinkle Gets Discharge
From WACs for (Read Below)
Fort Lewis, Wash., Jan, 28 (U.R) Pfc, Twinkle rolled her eyes
at her superior officer.
It was as if to say, ,4I don't see why I have to be discharged
from the WACs just because I'm expecting.
"It's in the regulations, that's why", came the militant reply.
"See for yourself , . . Here it ls
. . Section 3, Ar 615-361 . . .
Discharge from the army due to
pregnancy."
Pfc. Twinkle, a six-month old
black cocker spaniel, lowered
her head and pouted.
This scene was enacted at
headquarters of the WAC de
tachment here when Pfc. Twin
kle formally discharged from
WAC unit she had served so
well. Her individual service rec
ord with its many superior
marks proved her unwavering
loyalty. But even with an out
standing record, the inconsis
tency of modern living left her a
marked woman.
She needed help. The father of
her unborn had deserted her.
Former Pfc. Twinkle's bud
dies came to her aid. A letter
was sent to the American Red
Cross to prepare for maternity
care, hospitalization and future
planning.
But Ex-Pfc. Twinkle still won-
deded about getting into her old
outfit.
She walked disconsolantly
around the post, but finally took
actoin. She joined the WAC re
serves. Now she is looking for
ward to her 14-day period in the
maternity ward and rejoining
her old outfit the 6006 ASU.
In spite of Twinkle's wayward
life, the WACs intend to take
her back.
Soon after Pfc. Twinkle join
ed the WAC outfit here, she
was given a service record, com
plete to the final paw-print sig
nature. Then she was assigned
as clerk general 055 with basic
duty of greeting and entertain
ing all guests that enter the
WAC building.
The WAC detachment states
that the hospitalization and mat
ernity care afforded Twinkle Is
the best that can be offered any
where and future planning has
provided a home for each of her
expected puppies.
Unit Dates Schedule
Union val The Unionvale
home demonstration unit sched
uled for Wednesday was post
poned to February 1, at the so
cial room of the Unlonvale
church for an all day meeting
and dinner at noon. Basic tools
is the subject of the lesson by
project leaders, Mrs. Jamie Ed-
iger and Mrs. Adolph tirapa.
DEATHS
Mian Aliirft Evelm Chandler
Miss Alzira Evelyn Chandler, tate res-
Mint sua North Oanitol street, at
local hospital January 37, it the ace of
70 years. Survived by a cousin, rranx i.
Chandler of Los Angeles. Announcement
of service later by Olough-Barrlclt com
pany. Prank Elmer Evans
Frank Elmer Evans, at tha residence at
4716 North River road, January 37, Hus
band of Elizabeth Evans of Salem; fath
er nf nMlEht. Evans Blake of Sandy and
Lester Ray Evans of Salem; and brother
of A. J. Evans of Salem. Also survived
by Wire grandchildren. Announcement
of services later by W. T. Rlgdon com
pany, Albert Muhs
in this city January U. Albert Muhs,
late resident of Dresden, N.D., at the
age of 73 years. Husband of Therese
Muhs of Dresden. N.D.; father of Miss
Bertha Muhs and Miss Loretta Muhs,
both of Salem, Mrs. Ralph Oallagher of
Bottineau, N.D., and Mrs. Emil Schlu
ender, Francis Mush and Robert Muhs,
all of Dresden, N.D.; and grandfather
of Margaret Ann Oallagher of Bottineau,
N, D. Recitation of the rosary at the W.
T. Rigdon chapel Friday, January 37, at
B P.m. Shipment has been made to Dres
din, N. D., for services and interment.
Nathan Watklna
Nathan J. Watklns, former resident of
Toledo, at a local hospital, January 3&,
at the age of 83 years. Surviving are a
sister, Mrs. Leora Anderson, Salem; and
three brothers, Waldo want ins, Keomona;
RnhPrt. T,p Wntklns and William El
mer Watklns, both of Toledo, Services will
be held Monday, January 30, at 1:30 p.m.
at the Howe 11 -Edwards chapel.
Margaret Yungen
Margaret Yungen, at the family home at
route 1, January 2o. at the age of 61 years.
Survived by husband. Chris Yunuen of Sa
lem; three sons, Robert yunuen, van
Yungen and Arthur Yungen all of Salem;
a hrnther. F. A. Hofer of Bluffton. Ohio;
two sisters, Mrs. Rose Watklns of Toledo,
Ohio, and Mrs. John Launder of Williams
ton, Ohio; and a grandson, Walter Yungen
of Salem; member of the Bethany Evan
gelical Rrform church. Services will be
held at the Bethany Evangelical Reform
church at the corner of Capitol and Mar
ion streets, Tuesday, January ai, at t
P.m. with Rev. Russell Mayer officiat
ing. Interment In the Zena cemetery. Di
rection the Howell-Edwards chapel,
St. Theresa Panel This beautiful
and inspirational panel Is embroi
dered In cross, outline and satin
stitch In beautiful colorings of pur
ple, blue, rose, gold and Brown, i ne
finished panel resembles a beautiful
-minting.
Pattern Envelope No. R2907 con
tains hot-Iron transfers for panel 11
Saturday, January 28, 1950 15
Mothers of DeMolay
Boys Make Robes
Woodburn The regular
meeting of the Mothers' Circle
of DeMolay was held in the Ma
sonic parlors with Mrs. C. H.
Ahrens presiding.
During the business meeting
it was voted to donate a sum of
money to the Junior Woman's
club for the junior book shelf
at the library. Robes for the de
gree staff of DeMolay were com
pleted. Refreshments were served to
the DeMolay boys and their ad
visory board by Mrs. Harlow C.
Dixon, Mrs. Carl Barth and Mrs.
J. B. Gray. The committee for
the next meeting will be Mrs.
Lester Henn, Mrs. Lawrence
Harrison and Mrs. McKinley
Henderson.
The National Geographic So
ciety says dried sea slugs are
one of the chief exports of Port
Moresby, New Guinea.
OBITUARY
Ernest Albert Wilson
Independence Ernest Albert Wilson,
06. for more than half a century a meat
cutter here and nearby communltles.dled
Friday at a Corvallls hospital. He en
tered the hospital two weeks ago and af
ter release was forced to return a few
days ago. He was born In the Mountain
View community Jan. 4, 18B4, about
five miles from Corvallls, where he ob
tained his early education and later In
the Corvallls schools. Besides his widow,
Mrs, Pearl Wilson, of Independence, he la
survived by four children; Eldon Wilson,
Portland: Marlon E. Wilson, Indepen
dence; Mrs. Grace Attnew, Corvallls and
Mrs, Lucille Hill, Independence. Funeral
services will be announced later by the
Walter L. Smith funeral home and will
depend upon weather conditions and ar
rival of relatives from Washington state.
Tods for Spring Spring oalls for
plenty of versatile separates! In
this pattern, three "top" styles of
the season the dapper weskit and
Jaunty jacKet-oiouse, me Deicea-in
jerkin.
No. 2111 Is cut in sizes 10, 12, 14,
16. 18. 20. 36. 3B. 40. 42 and 44.
Slae 16 Jerkin, 1V4 yds. 35-in.V wes
kit. 1 yds. 36-ln.; Jacket, 1 yds.
36-ln.
Would vou like to see a collection
of more than 150 other pattern styles
that Includes designs lor all mem
bers of the family from tiny tots
and growing girls to Juniors and
misses, mature and larger-size wom
en? Just Include the WINTER
FASHION BOOK in your pattern
order It's a big aid to every home
sewer. Price per copy 20c.
Send 25c for PATTERN with
Name, Address and Style Number.
Mtate Size desired.
Address Capital Journal, 214 Mis
sion St. San Francisco 5 Calif
by 14 inches, material requirements,
stlch Illustrations, embroidery di
rections. To obtain this pattern, send 20o
in COINS, giving pattern number,
your name, address and zone num
ber to Peggy Roberts, Capital Jour
nal 82S Mission Street, San Fran
cisco 3, Calif.
J 1