Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, March 06, 1950, Page 18, Image 18

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    18 Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon, Monday, March 6, 1950
"""A-it. J,', J,:
" Collects for Defense Helen Maciolek,' private secretary
to Dr. Hermann N. Sander displays money and checks which
I have been sent into the Sander defense fun campaign which
- have been sent into the Sander defense fund campagin which
has been launched in Manchester, N. H. Dr. Sander is on trial
"Borroto. (AP Wirephoto)
Edgar Lee Masters, 80, Author
Of Spoon River Anthology Dies
- Melrose Park, Pa., March 6 U.R) Edgar Lee Masters, 80, poet
uthor of "Spoon River Anthology," died early today in a con
valescent home. He was stricken with virus pneumonia three
days ago.
- Masters, one of the nation's best known poets, had been more
-"for less an invalid since an attack
Edgar Lee Masters
Hot Lunches May Be
Served at Haysville
Hot lunch serving through a
school cafeteria is being consid
ered by the Mothers' club of the
Hayesville community with a
committee named to Investigate
possibilities at the meeting last
week at the home of Mrs. Robert
Burton, with Miss Gladys Tipton,
chool principal, speaking.
The committee will make
aiirvev of other schools in the
district and also the community
to learn how many mothers
would be interested in serving
the. lunches at the school next
fan.
Attending the meeting were
Mrs. F. Nekuda, Mrs. B. C. Hall,
Mrs. J. Barnes, Mrs. F. Hens,
Mrs. D. Dodd, Mrs A. Katka, Mrs.
P. Wcllbrock, Mrs. P. Zielinski,
Mrs. O. Noren, Mrs. F. Barth,
Mrs. R. Tuers, Mrs. R. Finch and
Mrs. H. Christonsen. The club
will hold the April meeting at
the home of Mrs. Dodd.
Membership Drive
For Concert Series
New requests will be filled as
cancellations of previous mem
berships are received, it is an
nounced by Salem Community
Concert association in starting Its
annual membership drive this
week,
! Cancellations, however, have
not been as numerous as expect
ed, according to Guy Hickok,
association president. The asso
ciation, too, Is limited in mem
berships because of the small
auditorium available for con
certs. Memberships are sold only
during the drive, no tickets be
ing available during the concert
eason.
Annual meeting for associa
tion workers is slated for March
27.
of pneumonia in December, 1943.
His second wife, Ellen, 30
years his junior, was with him
when he died. He also was sur
vived by their son, Hillary, 21,
Washington newspaper man,
and two children by his former
marriage.
The couple came here three
years ago. Mrs. Masters is head
of the English department at
Ogontz Junior College for Girls
in nearby Rydal, Pa.
"He had not really been well
for several years but he always
looked forward to when he
could resume his writing," Mrs.
Masters said. "Then he con
tracted virus pneumonia. He
died in only a few short days."
Masters was a successful Chi
cago lawyer when he turned to
poetry at the age of 45. He pub
lished "Spoon River Anthology'
in 1914 and six years later retir
ed from his law practice to de
vote himself to literature.
Although Mrs. Masters said
she had believed her husband
was 81 years old, "Who's Who in
America" lists his birth date as
August 23, 1869, in Garnett,
Kansas.
An artist friend found the
poet alone in a New York hotel
in 1U4J suffering from pneu
monia and malnutrition. Since
tie had no financial resources
he was placed in a charity ward
in a city hospital. He was tem
porarily separated from Mrs.
Masters at the time.
When Masters' condition was
called to the attention of the
"Authors' League," that organ
ization provided funds for him to
be moved to a private hospital
In 1946 he received a $5,000
fellowship from the Academy
of American Poets.
Demonstrating Lampshades
Brush College Mrs. Doreen
Johnson and Mrs. H. D. Brad
rick, Brush College Home exten
sion project leaders for the
March 9 meeting when the sub
ject will be lampshades, attend
ed the Polk county home ex
tension leaders meeting at Rick-reall.
Fair and Warmer Proves
To Be Hilarious Comedy
By EILEEN SCOTT ROSS ,
Cast members of ' "Fair and Warmer," second of the three
plays brought to Salem by the 20-30 club, played to a half full
house at the high school Bunaay nignt. .
In the three-act comedy By Avery Mopwood, Kooert Faquin
took the lead of the well-meaning but dull husband who resorts
to "wine, women and song to
arouse his wife's jealousy, thus
regaining her love. Joining him
in this endeavor is a naive
neighbor, played by Kathleen
Claypool, and the adventure re
sults in misunderstanding tem
pered with slapstick.
Peggy Deane took the role of
the bored wife, and Irving Kar
esli played the former suitor
wo Hold-up
Men Killed
Portland, March 6 W)t-Two
armed hold-up men were shot to
death here last night after a
quick-thinking woman camou
flaged a call for help with an innocent-sounding
request.
Using a gun he'd never fired
before, Eugene Archibald, 60,
killed two intruders in the little
suburban grocery store that he,
his daughter, and his son-in-law
operated.
Police identified the dead rob
bers as Henry Douglas Smith, 36,
Portland, and Jay W. Harris, 25,
West Linn, Ore.
Archibald and his family told
the following account:
Mrs. Lauriel Behrens, 25, was
taking her turn waiting on trade
while her father, Archibald, and
her husband, Marvin, played
cribbage in the apartment back
of the store.
She had just taken down a can
of sardines for two customers
when the customers suddenly
drew guns and said, "Okey, ba
by, let s nave tne money ... is
there anyone else here?"
Mrs. Behrens raised her voice
enough to carry into the back
room. "Yes, my father and hus
band are in the kitchen. Leave
enough money so we can open
in the morning."
The men at their cribbage
game heard her, and realized
what was happening.
Archibald walked Into the
store and fired at the man near
est him.
The other man was standing at
the cash register, one hand in the
till and the other on his gun. He
fired at' Archibald.
Archibald ducked, getting the
bullet in his wrist. Simultane
ously he fired, shooting the
bandit through the head.
The elderly grocer was taken
to a hospital.
"I always figure," he said
"that when anyone comes around
with a gun they ought to be
taken care of."
He had bougnt his gun as a
precautionary measure, but had
never tired it before.
who returns to court her again
and prompts the stuffy hus
band to hilarious action. Fur
ther complicating the jealousy
motive are Frederic Meyer as
Miss Claypool's husband, and
an overly friendly maid played
by Ruth Elliot.
The audience, generally quite
responsive, was especially amus
ed by a routine in the second
act in which Paquin attempted
to drink champagne from Miss
Claypool's open-toed slipper.
The various conflicts are re
solved with reconciliation on
all counts and a newspaper item
promising that tomorrow will
be "Fair and Warmer."
"Peg o' My Heart," last of
the group of plays, is scheduled
for April 25. The series is prer
sented by the Civic Drama Guild
of New York and sponsored lo
cally by the 20-30 club with
proceeds planned lor the pur
chase of playground equipment.
Albert Lebrun
Drive Quota Is Set
Unionvale Mrs. Howard
Steingrube, local chairman for
the American Red Cross, an
nounces that the annual drive
for funds is now on and that
Unionvale's quota is $100. The
.workers in this Community are:
Mrs.. Clark Noble, Mrs. Adolph
hraba, Mrs. Edward Clow and
Mrs. Steingrube.
Ex-President
Of France Dies
Paris, March 6 U.R)Albert Le
brun, 78, one-time farm boy who
twice was elected president oi
France, died today of pneumonia.
Death came at 7:30 a.m., Paris
time, in his home here.
He had been in retirement
since 1944.
Lebrun had been seriously ill
at his home for the last 10 days.
He is survived by a son, Jean
Lebrun, and a married daughter,
Mme. Jean Freyssinard.-
Lebrun was one of the few
statemen ever to be elected pres
ident of France twice. But he
did not finish his second term
because the Germans interned
him in 1943. Since the war, he
has spent much of his time in
a Paris nursing home.
Lebrun, who was born to peas
ant stock in the village of Mercy-Le-Haut
in Lorraine on Aug. 20
1871, was educated for a mili
tary career. But he gave up
soldiering to become an engineer
and later a statesman
In 1911 he joined the cabinet
when Premier Joseph Caillaux
appointed him minister of col
onies.
Later her served as minister
in governments headed by Ray
mond Poincare and Georges Cle-menceau.
After the First World War he
was elected to the senate and
the upper house of French par:
liament. He. became, vice presi
dent of the senate in 1926, and
president in 1931.
He succeeded to the presiden
cy of the Third Republic a year
later on the. death of Paul Dou
mer.
High School Students
Hear Scientific Talk
Monmouth The Monmouth
high school students heard a pro
gram sponsored by the National
Assemblies when Robert T. Ed
gar presented "The Cyclops of
JJalomar." H was a non-techni
cal, lecture-demonstration of the
great 200-inch telescope on Mt.
Palomar in California Following
this program Edgar talked to the
students of the general science
class and other students who
were interested in this subject.
POWERFUL HEARING AID
Developed for Those with '
Excessive Hearing Loss
Announcement of this powerful hearing aid has brought
hearing to many who have thought an aid could not
help them. This small single unit hearing aid can be
used with "Out-of-Sight" tip or with nothing in the ear.
For further information call or write -
SONOTONE
W. F. DODGE
1933 State St., Salem, Ore. Ph. 3-9485
Registered Holstein
Has Production Test
Brattleboro, Vt. Nugget Se-
gis Ormsby, a registered Hoi-stein-Friesian
cow ownedby C.
J. Berning, Mt. Angel, Oregon
has completed a 339-day pro
duction test of 619 pounds of
butterfat and 16,611 pounds of
milk made in herd improve
ment registry, this cow was
milked twice daily and was five
years four months when she be
gan her test period. Testing was
supervised by Oregon State col
lege in cooperation with the Hol-
stein-Friesian association of
America.
INCOME TAX
. Returns Prepared
LEON A.
295 Pine St.
FISCUS
Dial 3-5285
Examinations Given
Pupils at Turner
Turner Thirty-five first
graders and screened pupils
were given physical examina
tions this week by the Marion
county department of health. Ex
amining physicians were Dr. B.
I. Knapp and Margaret Dowell.
Volunteers assisting during the
clinic were Mrs. Wallace Riches,
Mrs. Albert Robertson, Mrs. Roy
Hatfield, Mrs. Marjorie Mitch
ell and Mrs. Carl B. Wipper.
Journal Want Ads Pay
we re
lops
for
topcoats
We Itlct ta eft halA
of toiled topcoats.
We pamper 'em,
clean em, press era
. . . spruce 'em up
with careful hands I
And, by the way...
right NOW is the
time to bring your
topcoats to us for
thorough dryclean-
ing.Have them
ready for springtime
wear!
'H""""r ' '' '1 ".. '
ELECTRIC CLEANERS
565 Highland Phone 3-4821
s n r r r rp
, . y.pj!-'- (y) 1 '.J
1 u JJ " r 4
I XV , , ijd ff E
11 X- I Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! p
fj I i I Just a few more days and still thousands of dollars 1 1 ' ' I
VI
Every counter, every shelf a bargain shelf.
Everything in the store must be sold to satis
fy creditors! Store opens at 10:00 A. M.
Hurry! Hurry!
Figurines and Bric-a-Brac
Values to 29c. Out they go! Your choice.
6c
Garden Trowels, Forks, etc. IQr
Finest quality. Reg. 39c choice, .
Babies' Rubber Pants
Latex reg9cjahv
2J9c
Penetrol Nose Drops
Reg. 60c closeout for
19c
Just a few more days and still thousands of dollars
worth of stock must be moved. All items re
grouped. The wolf is at our door. We must
liquidate! We slashed
and re-slashed our prices . . . everything is sac
rificed for quick removal!
WE MUST SELL!
All hopes of profit are gone . . . every price In
the store slaughtered unmercifully. Prices be
low wholesale cost! Act fast! Get in on these
bargains!
Rawhide Shoe Laces
Work shoe length Reg. 25c pr. . 2 pairs
15c
Colgate's Shave Cream 1Q
Large size reg. 39c I V
Floor Wax, Floor Polish 1QP
Fruniture polish and lots more CHOICE lV
household remedies. Values to 89c.
Prices slashed lower than ever be
fore! Our deadline is Saturday!
Everything must go by then! Get
in on the act ... be here when the
doors open!
Alarm Clocks
Regular $2.50
This one will wake yon up!
Pocket Combs
Regular lOe 3 FOR
1.39
9c
Tumblers
Large size, reg. 7c ea. 6 FOR
Men's T-Shirts
Extra long length, reg. 69c.
19c
49c
EVEN GREATER PRICE SLASHES . . . WE MUST SELL EV
ERYTHING BY SATURDAY! HURRY! BE IN LINE WHEN
THE DOORS OPEN!
Boys' Dress Shirts
All sizes and colors reg. 1.39
89c
STILL A LOT OF ALUMINUM
Silex Coffee Bowls
Regular 1.39
19c
TOYS CUT FURTHER
If you need toys for the kids 6 mos. to 60
years don't miss this.
Babies' Pants A QQ
Laces and bows, first quality. for " w
AllsizesamoloTjOuMhoejr
ALL POTS & PANS
Reduced Still Further
Bobbie Pins 1
TojjjuaJityejjJ0cardJ
Ash Tray Sets
4 cut glass trays in beautiful chrome
holder. Reg. 95c.
237 North Liberty
,10c
59c
Ladies' Slips 1 OQ
Fine lace trim reg. 2.49. . . leA
Friction ; Tape 1C
Reg. 15c roll 2 FOR U
Appliance Cords OQr
Ret. 69c . . . Mtl
Fits all irons, toasters, etc.
Clothes Pins
Reg. 10c doz DOZ.
Thousands left! '
5c
Open From
10 a.m. to
9 p.m.
Every Day